Injection valve for ultrahigh-pressure liquid chromatography

Anal Chem. 2005 Nov 15;77(22):7489-94. doi: 10.1021/ac051213f.

Abstract

The increased interest in HPLC at elevated pressures, beyond the conventional 6000 psi (400 bar), has created a demand for injection systems capable of withstanding pressures beyond the 20,000 psi (1380 bar). To achieve high-resolution separations, an appropriate length of columns packed with sub 2-microm packing materials, a 30,000-40,000 psi (2070-2760 bar) pressure range is desirable. A new air-actuated needle valve injection system rated to withstand pressures of up to 40,000 psi (2760 bar) has been evaluated. Under isocratic chromatographic conditions, injecting 200 nL and operated at approximately 20,000 psi (1380 bar), the system showed a peak area reproducibility of approximately 2.5% RSD, contrasting the 5% RSD of a pressured-balanced injection system operated under similar conditions. Programmed for partial loop injections using injection times of 300-700 ms (injection volumes in the range of 1-2.5 microL) and operated at pressures close to 30,000 psi (2070 bar), the reproducibility in peak area for the amounts injected was approximately 1.5% RSD or lower, while an injection time of 100 ms resulted in a reproducibility of 3-4% RSD. The new injection system did not show any significant carryover, and after thousands of injections, the system has not shown sign of wear, loss of pressure during injection, or loss in chromatographic performance.