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Detection challenges in quantitative polymer analysis by liquid chromatography

Journal of Separation Science 2020 50 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Wouter C. Knol, Bob W.J. Pirok Ron Peters, Bob W.J. Pirok

Summary

This review examines the technical challenges of accurately quantifying polymer distributions using liquid chromatography, where detector responses vary with molecular weight, composition, and chain architecture. These polymer analysis challenges are relevant to accurately characterizing the molecular properties of microplastics and their degradation products.

Accurate quantification of polymer distributions is one of the main challenges in polymer analysis by liquid chromatography. The response of contemporary detectors is typically influenced by compositional features such as molecular weight, chain composition, end groups, and branching. This renders the accurate quantification of complex polymers of which there are no standards available, extremely challenging. Moreover, any (programmed) change in mobile-phase composition may further limit the applicability of detection techniques. Current methods often rely on refractive index detection, which is not accurate when dealing with complex samples as the refractive-index increment is often unknown. We review current and emerging detection methods in liquid chromatography with the aim of identifying detectors, which can be applied to the quantitative analysis of complex polymers.

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