Test & Measurement
Agilent Technologies Introduces Supercritical Fluid Chromatography System
Agilent Technologies introduced the Agilent 1200 Series Analytical Supercritical Fluid Chromatography (SFC) System. This new system combines the Agilent 1200 Series Rapid Resolution Liquid Chromatography system with the Aurora SFC Fusion A5 into a complete SFC system. Aurora SFC Systems Inc. and Agilent Technologies have signed an OEM agreement under which Agilent will sell and support the combined system.
The In addition to the tenfold sensitivity improvement, the Agilent 1200 Series Analytical SFC System also costs from one-tenth to one-fifteenth of existing systems to operate because it uses standard-grade carbon dioxide instead of highly expensive liquid SFC grade carbon dioxide. Moreover, very low solvent consumption is environmentally friendly.
SFC can be three to five times faster than HPLC; it's an ideal match for small drug-like molecules; and it should be the method of choice for chiral separations, said Dr. Terry Berger, founder and chief scientist of Aurora SFC Systems. Agilent worked closely with us to bring these and many more advantages to the marketplace.
We're very pleased to be working with Aurora to help make this exciting technology accessible to the pharmaceutical community and other scientists needing to detect trace amounts of chiral compounds and measure enantiomeric excess, said Stefan Schuette, Agilent senior marketing director, Liquid Chromatography Business. SFC can now be considered a seamless extension of HPLC.
The Aurora SFC Fusion A5 connects to the Agilent 1200 RRLC System, combining the robustness, reliability and performance of Agilent's LC technology with the enhanced speed, resolution and sensitivity of SFC. Installation is completely reversible, so the Agilent instrument can still be used in RRLC configuration.
SFC is similar to normal phase HPLC, but most of the mobile phase is replaced by liquid carbon dioxide. Much higher flow rates are achieved with proportional increases in numbers of samples that can be run per shift, and associated cost savings.