Hi all,
I'm not going to lie, this is 100% a question on a take-home final. However, the book that we use, coupled with the professor, means I've not solved most of the problems on the take-home final through pouring over the book, but by google and doing my own research. Anyway, after 9/10 questions successfully solved and answered, I'm stumped beyond all attempts to solve this last question.
This question is in regards to Ion-Exchange chromatography with Eluent Suppressor Columns. We're told to view a figure in our book. It shows the separation of the group I and group II metals using ion-chromatography. The group I elements come off the column first and they're grouped into one peak. Then individually the group II elements come off the column in the order, Mg, Ca, Sr, Ba. We are then asked to explain why:
a) The group I metals elute faster than group II metals
b) The group II metals elute in reverse order of their atomic numbers
First thoughts that came to mind were Zeff, Ionic size, polarizability, and such. However, when I was thinking about that, I realized that group I ions would probably have the largest Zeff and would bind most tightly to the column. So that idea was shot, polarizability...we've got bigger, more polarizable elements at the bottom, so..I'd think that they would probably elute slower, so that might be a reason why the group II metals elute in the order they do. After googling everything I can imagine with regards to this question, and trying to find scholarly articles, I'm giving up. I've got other finals to study for (PChem, ugh), and after this many hours, I'm just frustrated with this professor's exam.
Now, reading the rules, I fully realize that "my professor is bad.." and such isn't an excuse. I understand that, and that's not my excuse, just one of the reasons I've decided to finally stop googling in vain, and come here in hopes someone can point me in the right direction.
I'm thinking A-Chem is the most appropriate section for this question, but if it isn't Mods, feel free to move this to the appropriate forum.
Thanks for your time.
BTW, take-home final is due on wednesday by noon (CST), just for reference.