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In analytical and organic chemistry, elution is the process of extracting one material from another by washing with a solvent: washing of loaded ion-exchange resins to remove captured , or eluting or other from an or chromatography column.

In a liquid experiment, for example, an is generally adsorbed by ("bound to") an in a liquid chromatography column. The adsorbent, a solid phase, called a "stationary phase", is a powder which is coated onto a solid support. Based on an adsorbent's composition, it can have varying affinities to "hold onto" other molecules—forming a thin film on the surface of its particles. Elution then is the process of removing analytes from the adsorbent by running a solvent, called an eluent, past the adsorbent–analyte complex. As the solvent molecules "elute", or travel down through the chromatography column, they can either pass by the adsorbent–analyte complex or displace the analyte by binding to the adsorbent in its place. After the solvent molecules displace the analyte, the analyte can be carried out of the column for analysis. This is why as the mobile phase, called an eluate, passes out of the column, it typically flows into a or is collected by a fraction collector for compositional analysis.

Predicting and controlling the order of elution is a key aspect of column chromatographic and methods.


Eluotropic series
An eluotropic series is listing of various compounds in order of eluting power for a given . The "eluting power" of a is largely a measure of how well the solvent can "pull" an off the adsorbent to which it is attached. This often happens when the eluent adsorbs onto the stationary phase, displacing the analyte. Such series are useful for determining necessary solvents needed for of chemical compounds. Normally such a series progresses from non-polar solvents, such as , to polar solvents such as , or . The order of solvents in an eluotropic series depends both on the stationary phase as well as on the compound used to determine the order.

Acids and bases (amines)

Water


Eluent
The eluent or eluant is the "carrier" portion of the mobile phase. It moves the analytes through the . In liquid chromatography, the eluent is the liquid solvent; in gas chromatography, it is the carrier gas.


Eluate
The eluate contains the material that emerges from the . It specifically includes both the analytes and coeluting solutes passing through the column, while the eluent is only the carrier.


Elution time and elution volume
The " elution time" of a solute is the time between the start of the separation (the time at which the solute enters the column) and the time at which the solute elutes. In the same way, the elution volume is the volume of eluent required to cause elution. Under standard conditions for a known mix of solutes in a certain technique, the elution volume may be enough information to identify solutes. For instance, a mixture of may be separated by ion-exchange chromatography. Under a particular set of conditions, the amino acids will elute in the same order and at the same elution volume.


Antibody elution
is the process of removing antibodies that are attached to their targets, such as the surface of red blood cells. Techniques include using heat, a freeze-thaw cycle, ultrasound, acids or organic solvents. No single method is best in all situations.


See also


External links

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