The individual factors that determine the kinetic performance (B- and C-term band broadening and bed permeability Kv) of radially elongated pillar (REP) columns are studied. To this end, columns with REPs having 4 different aspect ratios (AR=9, 12, 15, 20) were characterized experimentally and by means of numerical simulations. A tortuosity and retention based plate height equation was established, enabling a good global fit for all studied conditions. The B-term plate height contribution appears to decrease with a factor equaling the square of the flow path tortuosity τ. Going from AR=12 to AR=20 (τ=5.7 and τ=9.0 respectively), this resulted in a shift in plate height expressed in axial coordinates from Hmin=0.42 μm to Hmin=0.25 for non-retained conditions and from H=0.77 μm to H=0.57 μm for a component with k=1.0. The obtained parameters were combined to predict optimal time-efficiency combinations for all possible channel lengths. This revealed an efficiency limit of N=10(7) plates for a non-retained component and N=7-8 × 10(6) for k=1 for a channel with an AR=20, corresponding to a channel length of 2.5m and a void time of 2.4h.
Keywords: Column packing; Lab-on-a-chip; Microfluidics; Open tubular; Pillar array column; Radially elongated pillar.
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