Chromatography Explained
Learn what chromatography is, how chromatography works, and why gas chromatography, column chromatography, paper chromatography, and liquid chromatography are essential in modern laboratories.
What is Chromatography?
Chromatography is a laboratory technique used to separate, identify, purify, and analyze the components of a mixture.
It works with two main parts: the stationary phase and the mobile phase. Different molecules move at different speeds, which allows them to separate.
How Does Chromatography Work?
A sample is added to the system. The mobile phase carries the sample through the stationary phase. Each compound interacts differently, so the compounds separate and appear as peaks on a chromatogram.
Main Types of Chromatography
Gas Chromatography
Gas chromatography is used to separate volatile compounds using a carrier gas. It is common in food, environmental, forensic, and pharmaceutical analysis.
Column Chromatography
Column chromatography separates compounds through a packed column. It is often used for purification of proteins, antibodies, and chemicals.
Chromatography in Life Science
In life science research, chromatography is used for protein purification, amino acid analysis, antibody purification, nucleic acid purification, quality control, and biomolecule analysis.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is chromatography?
Chromatography is a method used to separate the components of a mixture.
How does chromatography work?
It separates molecules because they interact differently with the mobile and stationary phases.
What is gas chromatography?
Gas chromatography separates volatile compounds using a carrier gas.
What is column chromatography?
Column chromatography separates compounds through a column packed with stationary material.
Chromatography for Modern Laboratory Research
Chromatography remains essential for separation, purification, and analysis in analytical chemistry and biotechnology.
Explore Products