posted on 2002-10-08, 00:00authored byMichael W. Ducey,, Christopher J. Orendorff, Jeanne E. Pemberton, Lane C. Sander
Raman spectroscopy is used to examine the effects of
solvent, temperature, and surface grafting method (surface or solution polymerized) on alkyl chain rotational and
conformational order in a series of high-density octadecylsilane stationary phases ranging in surface coverage
from 3.09 to 6.45 μmol/m2. Rotational and conformational order is assessed using the intensity ratio of the
antisymmetric to symmetric ν(CH2) modes as well as the
frequency at which these Raman bands are observed.
Solvents studied include perdeuterated hexane, toluene,
chloroform, tetrahydrofuran, benzene, methanol, acetone,
acetonitrile, and water. Stationary-phase order was investigated at temperatures between 258 and 323 K. Alkyl
chain rotational and conformational order, and hence,
solvation of the stationary phase, is dependent on solvent
parameters (polarity, size, etc.), temperature, and stationary-phase properties (polymerization method and surface
coverage). Information on stationary-phase conformational order allows solvent−stationary-phase interactions
to be described in terms of a combination of adsorption
and partitioning models for reversed-phase liquid chromatography. Finally, a distinct interplay between solvent-
and temperature-induced ordering of these stationary
phases is documented that is also a function of solvent
and stationary-phase properties.