Abstract
Size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) is a well-known, versatile and scalable technique for the separation of molecules according to their hydrodynamic size in solution as well as for the determination of molecular weight distributions of polymers. In this paper we demonstrate and generalize the applicability of SEC to the classification and characterization of multimodal distributions of nanoparticles over a broad size range. After calibration with gold standards from 5 nm to 80 nm, the calibration curve is used to determine the particle size distributions (PSDs) of the standards which are in agreement with comprehensive nanoparticle size analysis by analytical ultracentrifugation. Universal calibration curves independent of the core material and surface functionality can be constructed if the pore diameter of the stationary phase exceeds the particle diameter by a factor of 2-3. Mixtures of gold standards are separated by SEC and evaluated in terms of peak resolution and size-dependent separation curves depending on how well the individual peaks are resolved. Baseline separation of a multimodal mixture is observed and its PSD is determined. Mixtures can be fractionated into coarse and fine fractions with nm precision at different switching times of the fraction collector. Our study demonstrates the strength of SEC to classify multimodal PSDs as well as to accurately determine size distributions of complex nanoparticle dispersions over a broad size range.
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