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Chromatography
Chromatography is the name given to a series of separation techniques that use two states of matter, one stationary solid and the other a mobile liquid of gas, to separate the components of a liquid or gaseous mixture. Chromatography is very good at separating organic compounds such as dyes, mixtures of drugs and poisons. Separation occurs according to the difference in affinity of the components in the mixture for the stationary and mobile states. There are three main types of chromatography:
Paper chromatography Experiment: Separation of ink dyes from a black marker pen.
You can repeat this experiment with different colors and pens. Some will
be single colors and others multiple colors. You can also try methylated
spirits or mineral turpentine as solvents. Liquid-column chromatography and gas chromatography Paper chromatography is suitable for simple separations of colored dyes, but is not much good for separating complex mixtures such as urine drug test samples. For these more complex separations liquid-column chromatography and gas chromatography are preferred. With liquid-column chromatography a glass column is lightly packed with
a stationary solid, such as aluminium oxide powder, and the mixture is
poured into the top of the column with the mobile carrier solvent. Each
component then passes through the chromatography column at a different
rate and collected in a flask. Gas chromatography is used to detect minute quantities of substances in a mixture. It operates in much the same way as the liquid-column chromatography, just that a gas is used as the carrier instead of a liquid and the mixture to be separated is first vaporised before injecting into the gas chromatography column.
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