1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9673(96)00920-x
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Migration behaviour of monovalent weak acids in micellar electrokinetic chromatography mobility model versus retention model

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Cited by 32 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…For weak electrolytes (acids, bases, amphoteric compounds) the overall retention factor is the weighted sum of the retention factors of all species present. For a weak acid, the following phenomenological approach is valid [19][20][21]:…”
Section: Theoretical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For weak electrolytes (acids, bases, amphoteric compounds) the overall retention factor is the weighted sum of the retention factors of all species present. For a weak acid, the following phenomenological approach is valid [19][20][21]:…”
Section: Theoretical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Equation (5) is the retention factor (k T ) for neutral analytes in MEKC derived by Terabe et al [39], where t 0 is the time for an unretained substance (EOF) and t m the time for the micelles to reach the detector. Equation (6) can be used for calculation of the retention factor (k C ) for charged analytes in MEKC [31,40,41] where m eff is the effective mobility of the charged compound in the MEKC system, m eff,aq being the effective mobility of the charged compounds in the pure buffer solution without any micelles and m m is the mobility of the micelles. Using Eq.…”
Section: Equationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The overall effective mobility of the charged analyte in the micellar/microemulsion system is corrected with the effective mobility of the charged compounds in a pure buffer system (without micelles/microemulsion). According to Muijselaar et al [41], certain assumptions must be made when using this equation. The influence of the micelles on the ionic strength, the dielectric constant and the viscosity are regarded as negligible and it is also assumed that an interaction between analyte and micelle monomer does not occur.…”
Section: Additional Experiments To Study the Effective Mobility Of Thmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The analytes were baseline resolved in one CE run when PVP was present in the carrier electrolyte at a 2.5% (w/v) concentration. In [16] it was demonstrated that differences in overall effective mobilities, based on interaction with a neutral surfactant (polyoxyethylene-23-dodecanol), can be applied for a sample stacking procedure, even if the sample compound is dissolved in a solution with the same ionic strength as that of the applied electrolyte system. Better peak shape and shift of pK a for p-nitrophenol was found in this case.…”
Section: Nonionic Polymersmentioning
confidence: 99%