Wash solvent guidelines

Wash solvent guidelines
Topic LCI-USG-0057, 最近更新 11/28/2023

To reduce the risk of carryover, follow these wash solvent guidelines.

Wash solvents clean the sample needle between injections and remove traces of the previous sample. They are commonly stronger than an application's isocratic mobile phase and are often as strong as—or even stronger than—the final mobile phase conditions for a gradient separation. Because they are not injected onto a column, determining an appropriate wash solvent requires, for all practical purposes, no chromatographic considerations.

For best performance, follow these guidelines when selecting wash solvents. Otherwise, you can increase the risk of carryover. However, these guidelines do not prohibit all other solvent combinations, which you can run with lower performance expectations or by manipulating injection parameters.

Note: To avoid damaging and clogging components in the wash and purge flow path, Waters recommends not using nonvolatile buffers or additives as wash solvents.
See also: Wash solvent recommendation for details on the Waters recommendation regarding nonvolatile buffer solutions.
  • Important: Wash solvents must be compatible and miscible with both the application's mobile phase and the sample components. They must also be fully soluble with the mobile phase and sample and should not cause precipitation.
    Use wash solvents based on the sample and mobile phase chemistries of your application.
  • Wash solvents must be strong enough to easily dissolve the sample and thereafter maintain solubility.
  • For buffered aqueous, reverse-phase chromatographic conditions, wash solvent with a high concentration of organic solvent is typically used, such as 80 to 100% ACN or MeOH with the remainder water.

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為避免引起人身傷害的風險和防止損壞實驗室設備,操作Waters產品時,請務必一律按照適用的操作和安全資訊,也務必遵守您所在組織的標準作業程序和當地法規。

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