Hybrid-supported phospholipid bilayers are a model structure utilized for measurement of molecular interactions that typically occur at cell membranes. These membrane models are prepared by adsorption of a lipid monolayer onto a stable n-alkyl chain layer that is covalently bound to a support surface. Hybrid bilayers have been adapted to chromatographic retention measurements of lipophilicity through the assembly of a phospholipid monolayer onto n-alkane-modified silica surfaces in reversed-phase chromatographic particles. Recent Raman microscopy studies of these particles have shown that the acyl chains of the phospholipid interact with the C18-alkyl chains immobilized on the silica surface, where both lipid and C18 alkyl chains become ordered because of chain interdigitation. Confocal Raman microscopy has also been used to investigate the association of small molecules with hybrid-lipid bilayers in C18 chromatographic silica particles; the partitioning of model solutes compares favorably to that in lipid vesicle membranes with similar changes in acyl-chain structure (disordering) with solute partitioning. The present study seeks information about how these membrane-mimetic bilayers assemble onto the C18-derivatized silica surfaces of reversed-phase chromatographic silica particles. Confocal Raman microscopy is capable of interrogating the time-dependent internal composition and structure within individual silica particles. The Raman scattering data can be resolved into component Raman spectra and corresponding composition vectors that describe the time-dependent changes in intensity of the component spectra. This analysis provides insight into how the structures of both the lipid and C18 alkyl chains of hybrid lipid bilayers evolve during deposition and organization on the internal surfaces of reversed-phase chromatographic silica particles.