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Elsevier, Journal of Chromatography A, 1-2(927), p. 237-241

DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9673(01)01095-0

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Practical method for evaluation of linearity and effective pathlength of on-capillary photometric detectors in capillary electrophoresis

Journal article published in 2001 by Ca Johns, Miroslav Macka, Pr Haddad, Marion King, Brett Paull ORCID
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

The optical characteristics of on-capillary photometric detectors for capillary electrophoresis were evaluated and five commercial detectors were compared. Plots of sensitivity (absorbance/concentration) versus absorbance obtained with a suitable testing solution yield both the linear range and the effective path length of the detector. The detector linearity is a crucial parameter when using absorbing electrolytes, such as for indirect photometric detection, and especially for highly absorbing electrolyte probe ions. The upper limits of the linear ranges (determined as 5% decline in sensitivity) for five commercial detectors ranged from 0.175 to 1.2 AU. The effective pathlength reflects the quality of the optical design of the detector and is equal to the capillary internal diameter only for a light beam passing exactly through the capillary centre, but becomes progressively shorter for imperfect optical designs. The determined effective pathlength for the five investigated detectors ranged from 49.7 to 64.6 μm for a 75 μm I.D. capillary.