Abstract

Fully porous silica microspheres (FPSM) with high specific surface area and hierarchical pore as matrix for HPLC were prepared. First, the porous silica nanospheres with controllable particle size and pore diameter were successfully synthesized using a dual-templating approach, the pore size of nanospheres can be increased to 18.4nm by changing the molar ratios of octyltrimethylammonium bromide (TOMAB) and cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide (CTAB), which is suitable for separation and analysis of biomolecules without pore enlargement. Then, the micron FPSM with hierarchical pore were synthesized by polymerization-induced colloid aggregation (PICA) using the porous nanospheres as a silicon source, which has alarge mesoporous structure (35.2nm) and high specific surface area (560m2g-1). Subsequently, the FPSM modified with octadecyltrichlorosilane were studied as stationary phase for separation of cytochrome C, lysozyme, ribonuclease A, and ovalbumin, bovine serum albumin, and the baseline separation of five proteins was achieved within 1min. The prepared column was also applied to the fast separation of digests of ovalbumin, and more chromatographic peaks were obtained compared to acommercial column under the same gradient elutionconditions. In addition, the static-binding capacity of the functionalized FPSM for bovine serum albumin (BSA) was measured to be 276mgg-1, which was nearly twice the static adsorption given inliterature. Therefore, these FPSM with high specific surface area and hierarchical pore structure are expected to have great potential for the separation of complex biological samples using HPLC. Graphical abstract A synthetic strategy was provided towards FPSM with hierarchical pores and high specific surface area using porous nanospheres as silicon source. The outstanding performance of the FPSM is that it has a high specific surface area while maintaining a large mesoporous size, which overcomes the disadvantage of sacrificing the specific surface area when increasing the pore size of porous silica microspheres prepared by using the traditional PICA method.

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