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Reviewer:  
Guojing
8/1/2010 11:40:18 PM
Silicone products are exported to your

Reviewer:  
Yaxuan
8/1/2010 11:39:43 PM
We can consider the issue of cooperation under the

Reviewer:  
Yilin
8/1/2010 11:39:11 PM
I believe that you, like your product quality

Reviewer:  
Jinsha
8/1/2010 11:38:12 PM
How often do you update a product

Reviewer:  
Wangfei
8/1/2010 11:37:17 PM
Your site no membership

Reviewer:  
Peini
8/1/2010 11:35:57 PM
Direct contact with the silica gel will not risk

silica gel is used in chromatography

2010-06-23 20:01:11     From:

Silica Gel-Type B | Silica Gel-Type B-marketnews | Silica Gel-Type B-faq | Silica Gel-Type B-reviews | Silica Gel-Type B-news


Chromatography column
In chemistry, silica gel is used in chromatography as a stationary phase. In column chromatography the stationary phase is most often composed of silica gel particles of 40-63 μm. Different particle sizes are used for achieving a desired separation of certain molecular sizes. In this application, due to silica gel's polarity, non-polar components tend to elute before more polar ones, hence the name normal phase chromatography. However, when hydrophobic groups (such as C18 groups) are attached to the silica gel then polar components elute first and the method is referred to as reverse phase chromatography. Silica gel is also applied to aluminium, glass, or plastic sheets for thin layer chromatography.
The hydroxy (OH) groups on the surface of silica can be functionalized to afford specialty silica gels that exhibit unique stationary phase parameters. These so-called functionalized silica gels are also used in organic synthesis and purification as insoluble reagents and scavengers.
Chelating groups have also been covalently bound to silica gel. These materials have the ability to remove metal ions selectively from aqueous media. Chelating groups can be covalently bound to polyamines that have been grafted onto a silica gel surface producing a material of greater mechanical integrity. Silica gel is also combined with alkali metals to form a M-SG reducing agent.
Silica gel is not thought to biodegrade in either water or soil [3].
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