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The first piece of hardware the mobile phase encounters is the pump, which delivers the mobile phase at a flow rate from the autosampler to the column and detector.
System back pressure depends on the pump design and flow rate, mobile phase composition, column dimension, and particle size. Retention time precision is vital to reliable analyte separation, identification, and quantification.
Thanks to years of evolving technology, modern pumps provide pressure up to 1500 bar with excellent flow accuracy and precision. Pulseless delivery of solvent is essential for reproducible measurements.
Most modern HPLC pumps have at least one pair of reciprocating pistons. One piston delivers the flow while the other aspirates the mobile phase at a programmed flow rate.
Piston switching in pumps uses either one motor with a cam drive or multiple linear drive motors – one for each piston. The pistons are either series or parallel, with the latter spreading wear evenly between pump heads at the cost of requiring more check-valves to direct the flow.
In isocratic separations, defined as a constant mobile phase composition throughout the separation, the eluent is either pre-mixed or mixed within the pump.
Alternatively, gradient separations provide varying mobile phase composition throughout the run. An HPLC pump needs one of two things to deliver gradients successfully: a proportioning valve found in low-pressure gradient (LPG) pumps or a second pump block found in high-pressure gradient (HPG) pumps.
Selecting the best pump for a given separation depends on your application needs and the analyte complexity. There are four types of pumps for an HPLC system:
There are a few different HPC pump types. Binary HPG pumps are most popular in routine and high-throughput applications which require a two solvent gradient. Quaternary LPG pumps are found in method development or when flexibility is key, isocratic pumps are used for simple QA/QC applications. Ternary DGPs are applied in workflow and automation solutions or dual system approaches.
Most modern HPLC pumps have at least one pair of reciprocating pistons. One piston delivers the flow while the other aspirates the mobile phase at a programmed flow rate.
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