50 Years of HPLC
50 Years of HPLC
50 Years of HPLC
In brief
By some estimates, this year
marks the 50th anniversary
of the method we now know
as high-performance liquid
chromatography, or HPLC.
The story of HPLC even from
the beginning has been one of
evolution rather than revolution.
Here, we revisit the early
days of HPLC and retrace the
incremental development of
the technique’s all-important
particle-packed columns (see
page 29). Then, we take a
look ahead, checking in with
companies and researchers
who are pushing the limits of
column-packing materials and
pressures to nudge HPLC toward
higher speeds and more complex
samples (see page 35).
F
or some chromatographers, their first inkling that high-performance liquid chroma-
tography was going to be a big deal came in 1969. That year, they traveled to Las Vegas
to attend the fifth in a series of meetings organized by University of Houston chemist
Albert Zlatkis.
Earlier meetings in the “Advances in Chromatography” series had focused on gas chromatog-
raphy, which separates volatile compounds in a mixture as it passes through a gas-filled column.
So, many of the attendees at that meeting in 1969 were GC experts who hadn’t heard much
about the technique that was to become HPLC. They were in for an awakening. “That meeting
was pivotal in terms of really giving a jump start to HPLC,” says Ronald Majors, who was in at-
tendance. After hearing about the still-nascent technique, “everybody got really excited.”
GC was still the dominant separation technology at Zlatkis-organized meeting as a turning point for HPLC.
the time. But GC had its drawbacks. Most important, GC But even more, he remembers what happened when he
requires that compounds be volatile or be derivatized to came home. Together with other people who had attend-
become volatile. “But it’s such a pain doing derivatiza- ed the meeting, Snyder organized a half-day meeting at
tion,” Majors says. Therefore, many large or polar mole- California State University, Fullerton, to update people
cules couldn’t be analyzed by GC. who hadn’t been able to go.
But they could be by HPLC. In HPLC, a liquid mobile “We planned for maybe 15 or 20 people showing up,”
phase carries mixtures of compounds through a column Snyder says. “They announced the meeting and sched-
packed with particles. As a pump forces the mobile phase uled it for an ordinary classroom. As the response came
through the column, the compounds interact with the in, it progressively moved to larger rooms and finally the
stationary phase—the particles’ surface—to different auditorium. About 150 people showed up. I could see this
degrees and are separated in the process. was hot stuff.”
HPLC was poised to catch on with scientists at that According to some estimates, this year marks the 50th
fateful Las Vegas meeting because there were appli- anniversary of HPLC. Those estimates typically point
cations—drug discovery and biological separations, to Csaba Horváth and Seymour (Sandy) Lipsky of Yale
among others—where leading separation methods such University publishing a paper in 1966 on ion-exchange
CREDIT: SHUTTERSTOCK
as GC just weren’t getting the job done. Since those days, separation of organic compounds (Nature 1966, DOI:
HPLC has become a workhorse of the analytical chem- 10.1038/211748a0). They followed up one year later with a
istry lab. And applications—from chiral separations to paper on fast liquid chromatography in which they used
proteomics—continue to drive advances in HPLC today. a pump operating at higher pressures than in their previ-
In 1969, though, HPLC was a relative unknown. Lloyd ous work (Anal. Chem. 1967, DOI: 10.1021/ac60256a003).
Snyder, then a scientist at Union Oil, remembers the They were among the pioneers at the landmark Las Ve-
Shrinking
Chiral separations New particles
Expanding detector Mid-2000s
1979 to
markets early 1980s Mid- to late New systems are
1972 James Waters and Chromatographers 1980s John Fenn introduced that contain
James Little of Waters develop methods and colleagues particles smaller than
help Robert B. Woodward for separating at Yale University 2 µm. They require
and his postdoc Helmut enantiomers with develop an pressures of 15,000 to
Hamberger separate HPLC. At first they electrospray 20,000 psi to pump the
isomers of intermediates add modifiers to ionization mobile phase through
in the synthesis of the mobile phase. source for mass the chromatography
vitamin B-12. Their Later, they develop spectrometry, column.
success helps open stationary phases which allows mass
the organic synthesis that can separate spec to be used as
community as a market enantiomers. a detector for LC.
for HPLC.
Proteins
First meeting Late 1970s to early 1980s Chromatographers
1973 First HPLC meeting is held in Interlaken, develop methods for separating peptides and proteins.
Switzerland. For almost a decade thereafter, the Those methods lay the groundwork for the proteomics
meeting is held biennially. In 1982, it becomes an and biopharmaceutical analyses that are done today.
annual meeting. The 44th HPLC meeting is being
held in 2016 in San Francisco.
JUNE 13, 2016 | CEN.ACS.ORG | C&EN 31
material he called pellicular particles, which
that any silanol groups remain-
were impermeable spheres coated with a po- ing on the particle surface not
rous ion-exchange resin. But Horváth’s col- attached to C18 are chemically
umns were inefficient because compounds blocked. They can be mixed
couldn’t diffuse deeply into them. modes, meaning that something
Kirkland, collaborating with Ralph Iler other than C18 is also bonded
at DuPont, improved efficiency by making to the silica. “There are so many
spherical particles in which the solid silicavariations of how you can make
core was coated with a porous outer shell of a C18,” Majors says.
tiny beads. The resulting core-shell particles And the various C18 columns
had more surface area and capacity for in- don’t provide identical separa-
teracting with and separating compounds. tions. The underlying silica, the
Kirkland and Iler followed these superfi- surface area, and the pore sizes
cially porous particles with fully porous can all be different, creating
particles of different controlled sizes and different interactions with the Jack Kirkland 40 µm. Throughout the 1970s
porosities. compounds being separated. (left), with and 1980s, the particle size
Then came bonded phases. One of the In all, there are about 1,400 technician Glen decreased to 10 µm, then 7 µm,
biggest developments in the history of different stationary phases, Wallace, in front then 5 µm.
HPLC, the bonded phase consists of mol- Majors estimates. But many of of a homebuilt By the late 1980s, the field had
ecules covalently linked to silica particles.them are for niche applications. HPLC instrument settled on particle diameters of
Octadecylsilane, also called C18, was the “There are a lot of different sta- in 1967. about 3 µm and upper pressures
most common of these molecules, which act tionary phases, but they’re not of about 6,000 psi, which were
as the stationary phase. Majors, who wrote used that much. I would guess that probably needed to push the mobile phase through
about columns and sample prep for the the top five or six stationary phases would the tightly packed columns. As the particles
magazine LCGC for more than 30 years, esti- separate 90 or 95% of all samples that are got smaller, the columns became shorter and
mates that 800 different C18 columns have done now,” Kirkland says. the separations became faster, partially as a
been introduced over the years. Over the years, the particles have become way to avoid operating at the pressure limit.
One might think that with so many C18 progressively smaller and more uniform. “They were trying to keep the columns
stationary phases, they’re just duplicating Before the advent of HPLC, chromatog- operating around 2,000 or 3,000 psi at
each other. But that’s not the case, Majors raphy columns were packed with irregu- most,” says James W. Jorgenson, a chro-
says. The C18 phases can be monomeric or larly shaped particles larger than 100 µm. matographer at the University of North
polymeric. They can be endcapped, meaning Horvath’s pellicular particles were about Carolina, Chapel Hill. “Even though the
equipment can go to 6,000 psi, you don’t
want to run a column at the pressure limit.
Progressive improvements What kind of lifetime is it going to have
Smaller particles and shorter columns have led to faster separations over the years. before it starts plugging up and exceeds the
Each chromatogram here shows the separation of a mixture (in order of elution, lef pressure limit?”
to right) of 1-methylxanthine, 1,3-dimethyluric acid, 3,7-dimethylxanthine, and In the 1990s, Jorgenson started using
1,7-dimethylxanthine. The conditions are identical, except for the particle size, column even smaller particles (less than 2 µm) and
length, and injection volume (not listed). higher pressures (as high as 10,000 psi) to
carry out separations. “We were after very
high efficiency separations,” he says.
Waters Corp. began its own work with
higher pressures and smaller particles, but
its goal was speed. “That was a wise choice
on their part,” Jorgenson says, “because a
large chunk of the market—people who do
pharmaceutical separations—needs high
throughput.” If Waters could promise highly
resolved compounds and get it done in 10
minutes instead of 30 minutes, Jorgenson
adds, it was a huge selling point.
The move to sub-2-µm particles and
higher pressures—eventually dubbed
CREDIT: COURTESY OF JACK KIRKLAND
genson says. pressure to be isolated in special labs, she portant,” Carr says. “If the way methods are
Even today, researchers continue de- says. That skepticism of high pressures has developed stays the same, then 2-D will be
creasing the particle size, leading to the in- led to a resurgence of core-shell particles important to certain fields, such as metab-
evitable pressure increases. But some, such (see page 35). olomics, proteomics, and lipidomics, but it
as Kirkland, question the need to continue Improvements in separation efficiency won’t be a routine way to do business. The
pushing higher. are still needed as chromatographers turn next five years will tell that story.”
Pressures of about 15,000 psi are suffi- their attention to complicated biological And so the evolution of HPLC continues.
cient for most applications, Kirkland says. mixtures. One way they are achieving such And much as in the early days, the applica-
“People are beginning to understand better separations is by using two—or more—col- tions scientists want to use them for will
the compromise between pressure and res- umns in series. In the simplest form of this push the developments. ◾