On the modelling of the effective longitudinal diffusion in bi-continuous chromatographic beds

J Chromatogr A. 2024 Apr 26:1721:464817. doi: 10.1016/j.chroma.2024.464817. Epub 2024 Mar 18.

Abstract

We report on the possibility to extend to bi-continuous packings the two models for the effective longitudinal diffusion Deff, or B-term band broadening, recently proposed for discontinuous chromatographic beds. In bi-continuous packings, like monolithic columns, solutes experience a connected end-to-end pathway in both the mobile and stationary zones, as opposed to discontinuous packings, wherein the stationary adsorptive zone is distributed over a set of isolated elements. Since it is unclear whether a densely packed bed of spherical particles should be treated as a continuous or a bi-continuous medium, this extension is also crucial to fully understand the behaviour of packed particle beds. The proposed models for the effective longitudinal diffusion Deff originate from the adoption of the Two Zone Moment Analysis (TZMA) method by which Deff can be expressed as a linear combination of two essential quantities γm and γs, referred to as effective zone-diffusion factors. In the present work we propose two analytical models for γm and γs that now cover both the discontinuous and the bi-continuous case. To validate the theory, several bi-continuous packings are investigated, including the tetrahedral skeleton model (TSM), six different Triple Periodic Minimal Surface (TPMS) monoliths and randomly packed beds of spheres. For all of these, the models provide highly accurate results for Deff over a wide range of porosities and zone retention factors k. The comparison with literature experimental data for both monolithic silica columns and columns packed with fully porous and porous-shell particles is also presented.

Keywords: Adsorption; Band broadening; Dispersion theory; Hierarchical porous media; Liquid chromatography.

MeSH terms

  • Adsorption
  • Chromatography, Liquid / methods
  • Diffusion
  • Porosity
  • Silicon Dioxide* / chemistry

Substances

  • Silicon Dioxide