Reverse Phase chromatography of a mixture of protein and sodium chloride: A. The salt will elute before the protein B. The salt and protein will co-elute C. The salt will elute after the protein D. The salt will elute but the protein will not

In Reverse Phase chromatography of a mixture of protein and sodium chloride:
A. The salt will elute before the protein
B. The salt and protein will co-elute
C. The salt will elute after the protein
D. The salt will elute but the protein will not

 

Reverse Phase Chromatography: What Elutes First—Protein or Salt?

Reverse phase chromatography (RPC) is a powerful technique used in analytical and preparative chemistry, especially in protein purification. It operates on the principle of hydrophobic interactions between the analyte and the stationary phase.


The Key Players: Protein and Sodium Chloride

When a mixture of protein and sodium chloride is subjected to RPC:

  • The stationary phase is non-polar (hydrophobic)
  • The mobile phase is relatively polar (aqueous or organic solvent mixture)

The interaction strength of the analyte with the hydrophobic stationary phase determines its retention time.


What Happens During Elution?

Let’s consider the properties:

  • Sodium chloride (NaCl): Very polar and highly soluble in the aqueous mobile phase. It does not interact with the hydrophobic column.
  • Proteins: Many proteins have hydrophobic patches that bind to the hydrophobic stationary phase.

Hence, during the chromatographic run:

✅ The salt will elute before the protein

Because:

  • Salt (NaCl) passes through unretained
  • Protein binds and is retained until eluted using a more hydrophobic mobile phase (e.g., increasing organic solvent)

Correct Answer: A. The salt will elute before the protein


Why Other Options Are Incorrect

  • B. Co-elution: Incorrect—salt doesn’t bind, protein does.
  • C. Salt after protein: Opposite of what’s true.
  • D. Salt only elutes: Protein also elutes eventually with a change in solvent polarity.

Key Takeaways

  • Reverse phase chromatography separates components based on hydrophobicity.
  • Polar compounds like NaCl elute quickly, while hydrophobic molecules like proteins are retained.

Key Phrase: reverse phase chromatography protein salt elution

 

24 Comments
  • Akshay mahawar
    April 6, 2025

    Done 👍

    • Yashika Rajawat
      April 13, 2025

      Awesome explanation 👍👍👍

  • Suman bhakar
    April 6, 2025

    👍👍

  • Prami Masih
    April 6, 2025

    Very nice explanation sir ji

    • Laxmi jangir
      April 16, 2025

      Very nice explanation sir

    • Laxmi jangir
      April 16, 2025

      nice explanation Sir 👍

  • vishal
    April 8, 2025

    done sir
    👍

  • Ujjwal
    April 15, 2025

    Done

  • Beena Meena
    April 16, 2025

    Done

  • Khushi yadav
    April 17, 2025

    Yes

  • Yashika Rajoriya
    April 17, 2025

    Done

  • Vikram
    April 17, 2025

    Done

  • Rani Sharma
    April 19, 2025

    Done 👍

  • pallavi gautam
    April 21, 2025

    done sir

  • Priyam choudhary
    April 24, 2025

    Done

  • Prami Masih
    April 28, 2025

    ✅✅✅

  • yogesh sharma
    May 2, 2025

    Done sir ji

  • Neelam Sharma
    August 30, 2025

    Nacl will elute before the protein because in reverse ya hydrophobic chromatography me stationary phase nonpolar h or mobile phase polar h so salt very polar h tb ye phlea elute ho jayega or protein k pas hydrophobic patches bhote h esley stationary phase ke sath tightly binded hoga or last me elute hoga

  • Meera Gurjar
    August 30, 2025

    Salt will ellute before protein

  • Aakansha sharma Sharma
    September 1, 2025

    Salt will elute before the protein bez salt are 100./. ionised they have charge so not bind with resin or elute first

  • Ajay Sharma
    September 1, 2025

    Salt will ellute first with water and salt also doesn’t have affinity with non polar resin

  • Ankita Pareek
    September 3, 2025

    Salt elute first then the protein Will elute becoz salt is highly polar does not interect with hydrophobic column while protein have hydrophobic patches that binds with hydrophobic stationary phase and retained in column

  • Komal Sharma
    September 4, 2025

    Reverse phase chromatography separates components based on hydrophobicity.
    Polar compounds like NaCl elute quickly, while hydrophobic molecules like proteins are retained.

  • Soniya Shekhawat
    September 6, 2025

    In a reverse phase chromatography in which is the resin is often nonpolar so the polar compound like first like salt (NACL)and nonpolar will be attached on resin elute late

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