Hi,
I've had difficulty with ion exchange chromatography in the past, and again am having difficulty separating a tertiary amine (PROD) from it's substitution precursor, iminodiacetic acid (IDA). I'm trying to wrap my head around what is happening on the column so I can match that with what to expect. I keep getting unexpected results, but I feel like I understand what is supposed to happen pretty well. I'm hoping someone can point out a misunderstanding or mistake in my procedure.
So, to run the column:
I prepare the gel by passing 6M HCl through to saturate the column with H+ ions and wash any other ions off the gel. Then, I add the crude mixture at pH 3 and both IDA and PROD stick to the gel, while the negative ions from the rxn and adjusting pH (Cl-, Br-) pass through the column with the eluent.
At this point, the eluent becomes acidic which I presume is due to the H+ that the amines and + ions (Na+) have displaced, and that the eluent pH returning to neutral signals that all + ions from the crude mixture are fixed to the column. So, at this point I begin to elute with a NH4+ gradient, which causes the pH of the collected fractions to again become acidic as more H+ are displaced from the column by NH4+.
Soon enough, the collected fractions show a pH of ~9, as does the mobile phase, which I assume means that all H+ have been pushed off of the column. Since that's the case, my amines (IDA and PROD) should have also been pushed off at this point, since amines bind more weakly to the column than H+, right?
Unfortunately, I can't find my product in the acidic fractions between starting the gradient and column saturation with the eluent. Am I missing something?
Thanks for the long read!