Abstract
There is no doubt that high-performance thin-layer chromatography (HPTLC) can be applied as a quantitative method if the technique is properly used. Densitometry is a commonly used detection mode for quantitation in HPTLC. The influence of instrumental settings on signal intensity, peak resolution, and peak positioning was rarely described in literature. Especially, quantitation of adjacent substance zones was critical when improper combinations of these settings merge. Future trends regarding ultrathin-layer chromatography and hyphenation to scanning or imaging mass spectrometry required the consideration of these delicate points. The influence of different instrumental settings on the obtained signal intensities was demonstrated for four separated parabens (each 150 ng band−1). The maximum mean signal deviations of all four compounds were 6.9% by the optical system, 16.8% by the scan slit dimension, 7.5% by the scan speed, and 1.5% by the data resolution. The influence of these settings on the quantitat...
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More From: JPC - Journal of Planar Chromatography - Modern TLC
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