R''ƒ'' value, solutes, and solvents
The retention factor (R''ƒ'') may be defined as the ratio of the distance travelled by the solute to the distance travelled by the solvent. It is used in chromatography to quantify the amount of retardation of a sample in a stationary phase relative to a mobile phase. R''ƒ'' values are usually expressed as a fraction of two decimal places. * If R''ƒ'' value of a solution is zero, the solute remains in the stationary phase and thus it is immobile. * If R''ƒ'' value = 1 then the solute has no affinity for the stationary phase and travels with the solvent front. For example, if a compound travels 9.9 cm and the solvent front travels 12.7 cm, the R''ƒ'' value = (9.9/12.7) = 0.779 or 0.78. R''ƒ'' value depends on temperature and the solvent used in experiment, so several solvents offer several R''ƒ'' values for the same mixture of compound. A solvent in chromatography is the liquid the paper is placed in, and the solute is the ink which is being separated.Pigments and polarity
Paper chromatography is one method for testing the purity of compounds and identifying substances. Paper chromatography is a useful technique because it is relatively quick and requires only small quantities of material. Separations in paper chromatography involve the principle of partition. In paper chromatography, substances are distributed between a stationary phase and a mobile phase. The stationary phase is the water trapped between the cellulose fibers of the paper. The mobile phase is a developing solution that travels up the stationary phase, carrying the samples with it. Components of the sample will separate readily according to how strongly they adsorb onto the stationary phase versus how readily they dissolve in the mobile phase. When a coloredTypes
Descending
Development of the chromatogram is done by allowing the solvent to travel down the paper. Here, mobile phase is placed in solvent holder at the top. The spot is kept at the top and solvent flows down the paper from above.Ascending
Here the solvent travels up the chromatographic paper. Both descending and ascending paper chromatography are used for the separation of organic and inorganic substances. The sample and solvent move upward.Ascending-descending
This is the hybrid of both of the above techniques. The upper part of ascending chromatography can be folded over a rod in order to allow the paper to become descending after crossing the rod.Circular chromatography
A circular filter paper is taken and the sample is deposited at the center of the paper. After drying the spot, the filter paper is tied horizontally on aTwo-dimensional
In this technique a square or rectangular paper is used. Here the sample is applied to one of the corners and development is performed at a right angle to the direction of the first run.History of paper chromatography
The discovery of paper chromatography in 1943 by Martin and Synge provided, for the first time, the means of surveying constituents of plants and for their separation and identification. Erwin Chargaff credits in Weintraub's history of the man the 1944 article by Consden, Gordon and Martin. There was an explosion of activity in this field after 1945.References
Bibliography
* {{DEFAULTSORT:Paper Chromatography Chromatography