29. Chromatography with solid stationary phase is called
- (A) Circle chromatography
- (B) Square chromatography
- (C) Solid chromatography
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Chromatography with solid stationary phase is called adsorption chromatography. The correct answer is option (D).
Question Breakdown
This MCQ tests basic chromatography classification by stationary phase type, fundamental for GATE Life Sciences biochemistry section.
Option Analysis
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(A) Circle chromatography: Incorrect. No such standard chromatography type exists; likely distractor term.
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(B) Square chromatography: Incorrect. Non-existent terminology in analytical chemistry.
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(C) Solid chromatography: Incorrect. Generic term; doesn’t specify separation mechanism (adsorption vs partition).
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(D) Adsorption chromatography: Correct. Uses solid adsorbent (silica, alumina) as stationary phase where solutes bind via surface adsorption (van der Waals, H-bonding).(D) Adsorption chromatography
Introduction
Chromatography with solid stationary phase is called adsorption chromatography, where silica gel or alumina adsorbs solutes via surface interactions while liquid/gas mobile phase elutes them differentially. This distinguishes it from partition chromatography (liquid stationary phase) and powers early separation techniques in biochemistry research and GATE Life Sciences exams.Adsorption Mechanism
Solid stationary phase (adsorbent) provides high surface area for reversible solute binding. More strongly adsorbed compounds move slower through column.
Key Adsorbents:
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Silica gel (polar, acidic)
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Alumina (polar, adjustable pH)
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Carbon (non-polar)
Mobile Phases: Hexane → increasingly polar solvents.
Types Comparison
Stationary Phase Chromatography Type Separation Basis Solid adsorbent Adsorption Surface binding Liquid coated on solid Partition Solubility partitioning Ion exchange resin Ion exchange Charge interactions Applications
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Natural product isolation (Tswett’s chlorophyll separation)
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Preparative purification
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TLC/HPTLC stationary phase
Used when samples have wide polarity range; gradient elution enhances resolution.
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1 Comment
Vanshika Sharma
February 2, 2026Adsorption chromatography