1st Edition

Advances in Chromatography Volume 41

Edited By Phyllis R. Brown, Eli Grushka Copyright 2001

    This is the 41st volume in the series Advances in Chromatography. The papers in this volume: take advantage of the properties of electroosmotic flow to explore capillary electrochromatography as an alternative to HPLC for nonvolatile analytes; analyze advances in biomembrane chromatography using reverse-phase HPLC for protein purification and biophysical studies of peptides and proteins at lipid-like surfaces; focus on trace metal determination and speciation performed by liquid chromatography methods; and more.

    Fundamentals of capillary electromatography; membrane extraction techniques for sample preparation; design of rapid gradient methods for the analysis of combinatorial chemistry libraries and the preparation of pure compounds; molecularly imprinted extraction materials for highly selective sample clean-up and analyte enrichment; biomembrane chromatography - application to purification and biomolecule-membrane interactions; transformation of analytes for electrochemical detection - a review of chemical and physical approaches; high-performance liquid chromatography - trace metal determination and speciation; temperature-responsive chromatography; carrier gas in capillary gas-liquid chromatography; catechins in tea -chemistry and analysis.

    Biography

    Phyllis R. Brown, Eli Grushka

    "Reviewer praise for previous volumes in the series... ...the articles are of high scientific standard, up to date, very well written, and interesting to read."
    - Journal of Chromatography
    "...a valuable contribution to the chromatography literature...belongs in every library used by chromatographers."
    - Liquid Chromatography
    "...The contributors are well known for their expertise in their chosen areas....thoroughly recommend[ed]...as very worthwhile additions to anyone's personal library of books on separation science."
    - Chromatographia
    "...maintains the high quality that chromatographers have come to expect from this valuable series."
    - Journal of Pharmaceutical Science
    "...most useful to those...developing totally new methods, or those attempting to increase the resolution of their separations or increase sensitivity of their methods."
    - Inform