Ion Chromatography
Ion chromatography is a liquid chromatography method that separates ions and polar molecules based on their relative affinity for the ion exchange resin in the column. Developed by Hamish Small in 1975, it combines ion-exchange separation with conductivity detection, enabling rapid, sensitive, and simultaneous determination of multiple ions in a single analysis. Ion chromatography has become an indispensable tool for monitoring environmental pollutants, analyzing food and pharmaceutical products, and studying complex ionic mixtures.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Small, H., Stevens, T. S., & Bauman, W. C. (1989). Novel ion exchange chromatographic method using conductometric detection. Analytical Chemistry, 47(11), 1801–1809. · DOI 10.1007/978-1-4899-2542-8_7
- Weiss, J. (2004). Handbook of Ion Chromatography (3rd ed.). Wiley-VCH. · ISBN 978-3527289721
- Jackson, P. E., Haddad, P. R., & Alexander, P. W. (1997). Advances in ion chromatography. Journal of Chromatography A, 789(1-2), 17–33. · URL
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