Chromatography in Greek means to ‘write with colors.’ It is a versatile separation technique developed in 1903 by Mikhail Tswett, a Russian botanist. He separated colorful plant pigments using a ...
The wide range of chromatographic techniques share one common aim: to separate a material into its components. A material, your sample, is dissolved in a solvent, called the mobile phase. This mixture ...
One-dimensional gas chromatographic (1D-GC) analyses of complex environmental, petrochemical, or biological samples often result in a chromatogram with a large portion of unresolved components. Mass ...
In chromatography, the components of a mixture are separated. This is made possible because different components interact with the mobile and solid phases differently, thus either being retained on ...
Gas chromatography (GC) is used for the analytical separation of volatile substances in the gaseous phase. This chromatographic technique is widely used in various fields of research and industrial ...
Chromatography is used to separate the given components of a mixture that have differing solubilities in a solvent. It can be used to separate coloured substances in a mixture, like the inks in this ...
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