ERLIC (electrostatic repulsion interaction chromatography) is a type of HILIC that relies on electrostatic interactions, coined by Alpert in 2008. The ionic stationary phase in ERLIC is chosen to have a similar charge to the analyte(s) so that the analyte is repelled by the stationary phase but also retained by the aqueous layer, allowing for enhanced interaction of the remaining polar, oppositely-charged functional groups of the analyte. Electrostatic effects have an order of magnitude stronger
chemical potential than neutral polar effects. These opposing effects can, in some cases, enable isocratic separations, with the mobile phase held constant instead of delivered at a gradient. ERLIC can be used to reduce retention of more polar functional groups and minimize the influence of common ionic groups within a set of analytes.
Cationic ERLIC A negatively charged cation exchange column can be used for ERLIC separations to reduce the influence of anionic (negatively charged) groups on analyte retention. For example, reducing the influence the phosphates of nucleotides or of phosphonyl antibiotic mixtures; or
sialic acid groups of modified carbohydrates, to allow separation based more on the basic and/or neutral functional groups of these molecules. Modifying the polarity of a weakly ionic group (e.g. carboxyl) on the surface is easily accomplished by adjusting the pH to be within two pH units of that group's pKa. For strongly ionic functional groups of the surface (i.e. sulfates or phosphates), lower amount of buffer can be used so the residual charge is not completely ion paired. An example of this would be the use of a 12.5mM (rather than the recommended >20mM buffer), pH 9.2 mobile phase on a
polymeric,
zwitterionic,
betaine-
sulfonate surface to separate phosphonyl antibiotic mixtures (each containing a phosphate group). This enhances the influence of the column's
sulfonic acid functional groups over its surface chemistry, slightly diminished (by pH), quaternary amine. These analytes will show a reduced retention on the column eluting earlier, and in higher amounts of organic solvent, than if a neutral polar HILIC surface were used. This also increases their detection sensitivity by negative ion mass spectrometry.
Anionic ERLIC Similarly, a positively charged anion exchange column can be used to reduce the influence of cationic (positively charged) functional groups on the retention time of analytes. For example, when selectively isolating phosphorylated peptides or sulfated polysaccharide molecules, use of a pH between 1 and 2 pH units reduces the polarity of two of the three ionizable oxygens of the phosphate group, and thus allows easy desorption from the (oppositely charged) surface chemistry. Negatively charged carboxyl groups in the analyte will be protonated at this low pH, and thus also contribute less to the polarity and therefore separation of the analyte == Applications ==