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Separation and Characterization of Synthetic Polyelectrolytes and Polysaccharides with Capillary Electrophoresis
Author(s) -
Joel J. Thevarajah,
Marianne Gaborieau,
Patrice Castignolles
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
advances in chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2356-6612
pISSN - 2314-7571
DOI - 10.1155/2014/798503
Subject(s) - polyelectrolyte , capillary electrophoresis , molar mass , polymer , chromatography , size exclusion chromatography , gellan gum , electrophoresis , characterization (materials science) , chemistry , chemical engineering , materials science , polymer science , organic chemistry , nanotechnology , food science , engineering , enzyme
The development of macromolecular engineering and the need for renewable and sustainable polymer sources make polymeric materials progressively more sophisticated but also increasingly complex to characterize. Size-exclusion chromatography (SEC or GPC) has a monopoly in the separation and characterization of polymers, but it faces a number of proven, though regularly ignored, limitations for the characterization of a number of complex samples such as polyelectrolytes and polysaccharides. Free solution capillary electrophoresis (CE), or capillary zone electrophoresis, allows usually more robust separations than SEC due to the absence of a stationary phase. It is, for example, not necessary to filter the samples for analysis with CE. CE is mostly limited to polymers that are charged or can be charged, but in the case of polyelectrolytes it has similarities with liquid chromatography in the critical conditions: it does not separate a charged homopolymer by molar mass. It can thus characterize the topology of a branched polymer, such as poly(acrylic acid), or the purity or composition of copolymers, either natural ones such as pectin, chitosan, and gellan gum or synthetic ones

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