Pragya Project PDF
Pragya Project PDF
Pragya Project PDF
ABSTRACT
In the present article attempt has been made to explain the basic ideas and the
significance of Thin layer Chromatography (TLC) in different analytical methods. As TLC is
less time consuming, low cost, and can be performed with less complicated technique it has
a wide application in pharmaceutical analysis. If performed precisely 32 amino acids can be
separated by TLC. Also it has a wide application in identifying impurities in a compound. It
can be used as a preliminary analytical method prior to HPLC. The concept of TLC is simple
and samples usually require only minimal pretreatment. TLC can be used to monitor the
progress of a reaction, identify compounds present in a given substance. TLC is also used to
separate the identical compounds in a mixture. Many standard methods in industrial
chemistry, environmental toxicology, food chemistry, water, inorganic and pesticide
analysis, dye purity, cosmetics, plant materials, and herbal analysis rely upon TLC as the
preferred approach.
Keywords:
Thin layer chromatography, capillary action, Mobile phase, Rƒ value
INTRODUCTION
Thin layer chromatography can be used to: Monitor the progress of a reaction,
identify compounds present in a given substance, determine the purity of a substance.
Separation of compounds is based on the competition of the solute and the mobile
phase for binding places on the stationary phase. For instance, if normal phase silica gel
is used as the stationary phase it can be considered polar. Given two compounds which
differ in polarity, the more polar compound has a stronger interaction with the silica
and is therefore more capable to dispel the mobile phase from the binding places.
Consequently, the less polar compound moves higher up the plate (resulting in a
higher Rf value). If the mobile phase is changed to a more polar solvent or mixture of
solvents, it is more capable of dispelling solutes from the silica binding places and all
compounds on the TLC plate will move higher up the plate. Practically this means that if
you use a mixture of ethyl acetate and heptane as the mobile phase, adding more ethyl
acetate results in higher Rf values for all compounds on the TLC plate. Changing the
polarity of the mobile phase will normally not result in reversed order of running of the
compounds on the TLC plate.
Principle of TLC 1:
Thin layer chromatography uses a thin glass plate coated with either aluminum
oxide or silica gel as the solid phase. The mobile phase is a solvent chosen according to
the properties of the components in the mixture. The principle of TLC is the distribution
of a compound between a solid fixed phase (the thin layer) applied to a glass or plastic
plate and a liquid mobile phase (eluting solvent) that is moving over the solid phase. A
small amount of a compound or mixture is applied to a starting point just above the
bottom of TLC plate.
The plate is then developed in the developing chamber that has a shallow pool of
solvent just below the level at which the sample was applied. The solvent is drawn up
through the particles on the plate through the capillary action, and as the solvent moves
over the mixture each compound will either remain with the solid phase or dissolve in
the solvent and move up the plate.
Whether the compound moves up the plate or stays behind depend on the
physical properties of that individual compound and thus depend on its molecular
structure, especially functional groups. The solubility rule “ Like Dissolves Like” is
followed. The more similar the physical properties of the compound to the mobile
phase, the longer it will stay in the mobile phase. The mobile phase will carry the most
soluble compounds the furthest up the TLC plate. The compounds that are less soluble
in the mobile phase and have a higher affinity to the particles on the TLC plate will stay
behind.
Rƒ values :
by Solvent by component
Spots as Compounds
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= 0.34
1. Nature of adsorbent: Different adsorbents will give different Rƒ value for same
solvent. Reproducibility is only possible for given adsorbent of constant particle size
and binder. Plates should be stored over silica gel in desiccators before use and the
sample should be applied quickly so that the water vapor in the atmosphere is not
adsorbed by the plate. Because of the difficulties associated with activation procedures,
it is far better to use plates stored at room temperature and not to activate them.
2. The mobile phase: The purity of solvents and quantity of solvent mixed should be
strictly controlled. It should be made freshly for each run if one of the solvents is very
volatile or hygroscopic. Example- acetone.
5. Developing tank: It is important that saturated conditions are attained for running
TLC plates. This is best accomplished by using small tanks with filter paper liners and
sufficient solvent, and by leaving the tank to equilibrate for at least 30 minutes before
running the plates. A well fitting lid is essential.
6. Mass of sample: Increasing the mass of sample on the plate will often increase the
Rƒ of drug, especially if it normally tails in the system. However, if a plate is grossly
overloaded, this too will give a tailing spot and will have the effect of apparently
decreasing the Rƒ value. The two situations are normally easy to distinguish by the
intensity of the spot.
Plate preparation 1:
TLC plates are usually commercially available, with standard particle size ranges
to improve reproducibility. They are prepared by mixing the adsorbent, such as silica
gel, with a small amount of inert binder like calcium sulfate (gypsum) and water. This
mixture is spread as thick slurry on an unreactive carrier sheet, usually glass, thick
aluminum foil, or plastic. The resultant plate is dried and activated by heating in an
oven for thirty minutes at 110 °C. The thickness of the adsorbent layer is typically
around 0.1- 0.25 mm for analytical purposes and around 0.5- 2.0 mm for preparative
TLC.
Capillary spotters:
Place a melting point capillary and in the dark blue part of the Bunsen burner
flame. Hold it there until it softens and starts to sag. Quickly remove the capillary from
the flame and pull on both ends to about 2-3 times its original length. If you pull the
capillary inside the flame, you will have a "piece of art", but not a good spotter. Allow
the capillary to cool down, and then International Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences
and Research ISSN: 0975-8232 Available online on www.ijpsr.com 259 break it in the
middle. Make sure to break off the closed end on one of them.
The thin end of the spotter is placed in the dilute solution; the solution will rise
up in the capillary (capillary forces). Touch the plate briefly at the start line. Allow the
solvent to evaporate and spot at the same place again. This way you will get a
concentrated and small spot. Try to avoid spotting too much material, because this will
deteriorate the quality of the separation considerably (‘tailing’). The spots should be far
enough away from the edges and from each other as well. If possible, you should spot
the compound or mixture together with the starting materials and possible
intermediates on the plate.
Location of spots:
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making use of some spraying agent, which produces colored areas in the region which
they occupy.
Specifically in TLC following can be used for spraying the invisible spots:
1. Being purely inorganic in nature, corrosive agents may also be used for spraying on
the invisible spots.
3. Vapors of sulfur trioxide, produced on warming fuming sulfuric acid, chars organic
compound and makes them visible as dark spots.
5. Iodine vapors.
Other common reagents include saturated solution of hydrogen sulphide, 0.2N aqueous
ammonium sulphide, 0.1% alcoholic quercetin, 0.2% methanolic 1-(2-pyridylazo)- 2-
napthol, 1% methanolic oxine , and 0.5% aqueous sodium rhodizonate. If the adsorbent
used for the TLC plate contains a fluorescing material, the solutes can be viewed under
ultraviolet light.
Development solvents 2
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Non-polar solvents are generally used, as highly polar solvents cause the adsorption of
any component of the solvent mixture. Commonly used development solvents are
petroleum ether, carbon tetrachloride, pyridine, glycol, glycerol, diethyl ether,
formamide, methanol, ethanol, acetone, and n-propanol.
Mobile Phase:
For silica gel chromatography, the mobile phase is an organic solvent or mixture
of organic solvents. As the mobile phase moves pass the surface of the silica gel it
transports the analyte pass the particles of the stationary phase. However, the analyte
molecules are only free to move with the solvent if they are not bound to the surface of
the silica gel.
Thus, the fraction of the time that the analyte is bound to the surface of the silica
gel relative to the time it spends in solution determines the retention factor of the
analyte. The ability of an analyte to bind to the surface of the silica gel in the presence of
a particular solvent or mixture of solvents can be viewed as a the sum of two
competitive interactions. First, polar groups in the solvent can compete with the
analyte for binding sites on the surface of the silica gel. Therefore, if a highly polar
solvent is used, it will interact strongly with the surface of the silica gel and will leave
few sites on the stationary phase free to bind with the analyte. The analyte will,
therefore, move quickly pass the stationary phase. Similarly, polar groups in the solvent
can interact strongly with polar functionality in the analyte and prevent interaction of
the analyte with the surface of the silica gel.
This effect also leads to rapid movement of the analyte pass the stationary phase.
The polarity of a solvent to be used for chromatography can be )evaluated by
examining the dielectric constant ( ) of the solvent. The largerand dipole moment (
these two numbers, the more polar is the solvent. In addition, the hydrogen bonding
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ability of the solvent must also be considered. For example methanol is a strong
hydrogen bond donor and will severely inhibit the ability of all but the most polar
analytes to bind the surface of the silica gel.
Developing a Plate 2:
A TLC plate can be developed in a beaker or closed jar. Place a small amount of solvent (
mobile phase) in the container. A small spot of solution containing the sample is applied
to a plate, about one centimeter from the base. The plate is then dipped in to a suitable
solvent, such as hexane or ethyl acetate, and placed in a sealed container. The solvent
moves up the plate by capillary action and meets the sample mixture, which is
dissolved and is carried up the plate by the solvent.
Different compounds in the sample mixture travel at different rates due to the
differences in their attraction to the stationary phase, and because of differences in
solubility in the solvent. By changing the solvent, or perhaps using a mixture, the
separation of components (measured by the Rf value) can be adjusted. The solvent level
has to be below the starting line of the TLC, otherwise the spots will dissolve away. The
lower edge of the plate is then dipped in a solvent. The solvent (eluent) travels up the
matrix by capillarity, moving the components of the samples at various rates because of
their different degrees of interaction with the matrix (stationary phase) and solubility
in the developing solvent. Non-polar solvents will force non-polar compounds to the
top of the plate, because the compounds dissolve well and do not interact with the polar
stationary phase.
Allow the solvent to travel up the plate until ~1 cm from the top. Take the plate out and
mark the solvent front immediately. Do not allow the solvent to run over the edge of the
plate. Next, let the solvent evaporate completely.
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3. While applying sample, the surface of the adsorbent should not be disturbed as this
distorts the shapes of the spots on subsequent developed chromatogram, hindering the
accuracy of quantitative measurements.
4. The sample spot should be within 2-5 mm in diameter. The TLC Experiment: LC
chamber for development with a lid or a closed jar.
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VISUALIZATION
When the solvent front has moved to within about 1 cm of the top end of the
adsorbent (after 15 to 45 minutes), the plate should be removed from the developing
chamber, the position of the solvent front marked, and the solvent allowed to
evaporate. If the components of the sample are colored, they can be observed directly. If
not, they can sometimes be visualized by shining ultraviolet light on the plate or by
allowing the plate to stand for a few minutes in a closed container in which the
atmosphere is saturated with iodine vapor. Sometimes the spots can be visualized by
spraying the plate with a reagent that will react with one or more of the components of
the sample.
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ANALYSIS
The adsorbent layer will thus fluoresce light green by itself, but spots of analyte
quench this fluorescence, Iodine vapors are a general unspecific color reagent, Specific
color reagents exist into which the TLC plate is dipped or which are sprayed onto the
plate. Once visible, the Rf value, or retention factor, of each spot can be determined by
dividing the distance traveled by the product by the total distance traveled by the
solvent (the solvent front). These values depend on the solvent used, and the type of
TLC plate, and are not physical constants.
Preparative TLC 8 :
The backing material is then extracted with a suitable solvent (e.g. DCM) and
filtered to give the isolated material upon removal of the solvent. For small-scale
reactions with easily separated products, preparative TLC can be a far more efficient in
terms of time and cost than doing chromatography. Obviously, the whole plate cannot
be chemically developed or the product will be chemically destroyed. Thus this
technique is best used with compounds that are colored, or visible under UV light.
Alternatively, a small section of the plate can be chemically developed e.g. cutting a
section out and chemically developing it, or masking most of the plate and exposing a
small section to a chemical developer like iodine.
1. TLC of amino acids: TLC of amino acids is more difficult than TLC of inks, because
amino acids are colorless. Therefore, one cannot see the spots with the naked eye once
the plate is fully developed and dried. To see the spots, it is necessary to use either the
ninhydrin or the black-light visualization techniques.
E.g., Amino acids, proteins and peptides 8: A mixture of 34 amino acids, proteins
and peptides has been successfully separated and isolated from urine using silica gel
plates. All these substances were found to be ninhydrin positive. The development were
carried out first with chloroform-methanol-20%ammonium hydroxide (2:2:1) and then
with phenol-water.
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2. Pharmaceuticals and drugs: TLC is used in the identification, purity testing and
determination of the concentration of active ingredients, auxiliary substances and
preservatives in drugs and drug preparations, process control in synthetic
manufacturing processes. Various pharmacopoeias have accepted TLC technique for
the detection of impurity in a drug or chemical.
E.g., Antibiotics: Penicillin’s have been separated on silica gel ‘G’ by using the two
solvents, acetone- methanol (1:1) and isopropanol-methanol (3:7). As the detecting
agent, the iodine-azide reaction was employed by spraying the dried plates with a 0.1 %
iodine solution containing 3.5% of sodium azide
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processes, so that minor metabolites can be detected and resolved completely free of
other components.
7. Food Analysis: For the determination of pesticides and fungicides in drinking water,
residues in vegetables, salads and meat, vitamins in soft drinks, banned additives in
Germany
E.g. sandalwood extract in fish and meat products), compliance with limit values (e.g.
polycyclic compounds in drinking water, aflatoxins in milk and milk products). A typical
separation of dyes in spinach looks like this:
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It has been widely used for checking number of other separation processes. TLC has
also been applied successfully in various purification processes, checking of distillation
fractions and for checking the progress of purification by molecular distillation. TLC has
been used as an analytical tool in
TLC has been used as an analytical tool inorganic chemistry due to its high speed of
separation and its applicability in a large number of chemical compounds. It’s important
use is in the separation and isolation of individual components of a mixture, but in organic
chemistry it has also been used for: Checking the purity of samples, as purification process,
for identification of organic compounds, for studying various organic reactions, in
characterizing and isolating a number of compounds such as acids, alcohols, glycols,
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amides, alkaloids, vitamins, amino acids, antibiotics, food stuffs and examination of
reaction. The reaction mixture is examined by TLC to assess whether the reaction is
complete or otherwise. The method is also used in checking other separational processes
and purification processes like distillation, molecular distillation etc.
High sensitivity of TLC is used to check purity of sample, because high sensitivity
enables impurities to be observed in so called pure samples. With the help of TLC it is
possible to know whether a reaction is complete and had followed the expected course. The
nature of byproducts can also be ascertained by using TLC. If the reaction does not proceed
as desired or expected, then an examination of the behaviour of the spots with standard
reagents may sometimes give information for the rapid identification of the products.
PROBLEMS IN TLC
Over-large Spots: Sample spots made using TLC capillaries should be no larger than 1-2
mm in diameter, because component spots in the developed plate will be no smaller than,
and will usually be larger than, the size of the initial spot. If the initial spot is larger than 2
mm in diameter, then components with similar Rf values may not be resolved because their
spots will be so large that they will overlap considerably and may appear to be one large
spot. Small initial spots, on the other hand, maximize the potential of complete separation
of components.
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If the bottom of the TLC plate is placed on this curved surface, the shape of the solvent
advance line may mirror the shape of the container bottom. It is therefore important to use
flat bottomed developing tanks in TLC. A bowed solvent front may also result if too little
developing solvent is placed in the chamber; if the plate is cut improperly, so that the sides
are not exactly perpendicular to the bottom edge; and if the slide is excessively tilted in the
chamber. Care in choosing and using a developing chamber is the best defense against
curved solvent fronts. Water is seldom used as a developing solvent because it has a
tendency to produce a dramatically curved front. This may be due to its unusually high
surface tension.
Streaking: Sometimes a substance will move along a TLC plate as a long streak, rather
than as a single discrete spot. This is the result of spotting the plate with too much
substance, more than the moving solvent can handle. The solvent moves as much substance
as it can, but a substantial amount of substance is left behind. The substance is dragged
along by the solvent leaving a trail of substance that may sometimes span the entire
distance between the starting line and the solvent front. Streaking can be eliminated by
systematically diluting the spotting solution until development and visualization show the
substances moving as single spots, rather than elongated streaks.
TLC of amino acids is more difficult one cannot see the spots with the naked eye
once the plate is fully developed and dried. To see the spots, it is necessary to use either the
ninhydrin or the black-light visualization techniques
Observe the spots, and decide whether or not a chosen solvent system has been effective in
moving an amino acid or in separating a mixture. Therefore the process of finding an
effective solvent system can be long and painstaking. As points of general information,
amino acids are quite polar and tend to move on silica gel plates with polar solvents.
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They have Rf values close to 1 when water or concentrated ammonia is used as the
developing solvent, probably because of their high solubility in water. Diluting a polar
solvent with a less polar one results in smaller Rf values, roughly in proportion to the
amount of less polar solvent used, Thus, alanine, glycine, threonine, and proline all have Rf
values of around 0.60 when developed with a 50/50 mixture of water and n-propanol, and
around 0.40 when developed with a 30/70 mixture of concentrated NH3 and n-propanol.
The following procedure assumes the use of 50/50 water/n-propanol as the developing
solvent, but one can try other polar/non-polar combinations.
Experimental Procedure:
Remove the plate from the tank and place it in an oven at 50 o C to dry. When the
plate is dry, visualize it using ninhydrin spray or iodination. Circle the amino acid spots
with pencil, and calculate Rf values. Compare the measured Rf values with the values for
the amino acids. On this basis, identity of amino acid is done. In combination with other
data , obtain, information which will help unambiguously to identify amino acid.
Suppose that amino acid has Rf value similar to that of alanine, one should then prepare a
small amount of alanine solution and spot it alongside amino acid on a new TLC plate.
Develop, dry, and visualize the plate to confirm that amino acid indeed has exactly the same
value as alanine, and that the spot is the same shape and color. Finally, it is very important
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to be observant of detail in doing TLC. In addition to the Rf value for a substance, the shape
of the spot produced by a particular developing solvent and the shade of color produced by
iodine or ninhydrin can be characteristic of the substance. For example, when alanine,
glycine, threonine, and proline are spotted side-by-side on a plate and developed with 70%
npropanol/30% conc NH3 following observations can be made:
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On a balance weigh out 0.5 grams of fresh spinach and combine with 0.5 grams of
anhydrous magnesium sulfate and 1.0 grams of sand. Transfer these materials to a mortar
and using a pestle grind the mixture until a fine dry powder is obtained (grind the mixture
really well). The anhydrous magnesium sulfate will remove the water from the leaves.
Transfer the powder (2.0 grams total) to a small test tube and combine with 2.0 mL of
acetone. Stopper the test tube and shake vigorously for approximately one minute. You
need to make sure that the solid and solvent are well mixed.
Allow this mixture to stand for 10 minutes, and then using a pipette carefully
transfer the solvent above the solid into a small micro centrifuge tube. Use care not to
transfer any of the solid material. The solvent extract should be green. Cap the micro
centrifuge tube to minimize solvent evaporation. Obtain a TLC chamber (a 400 mL glass
beaker covered with parafilm or aluminum foil) and add developing solvent (a mixture of
petroleum ether, acetone, cyclohexane, ethyl acetate and methanol). The solvent should
completely cover the bottom of the chamber to a depth of approximately 0.5 cm. Keep the
chamber covered so that evaporation doesn’t change the composition of the solvent. Allow
the TLC plate to develop (separation of pigments) for approximately 10 minutes. As the
solvent moves up the TLC plate you should see the different colored pigments separating.
Remove the TLC plate from the chamber when the solvent front is approximately
1.0cm from the top of the TLC plate. With a pencil, mark the level of the solvent front
(highest level the solvent moves up the TLC plate) as soon as you remove the strip from the
chamber (the solvent evaporates and disappears quickly). Also measure the pigment
distances quickly as some pigments (especially the betacarotene) may fade over time.
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Beta-carotene is the most non-polar pigment (highest Rf) and its band will be
yellow. Chlorophyll a has a larger Rf than does chlorophyll b. For the following calculations
mark the center of the initial pigment dot; this will be the starting point for all the following
measurements. Also mark the middle point of each pigment band and the solvent front. The
literature gives Rf values of 0.61 and 0.49 for pheophytin a and pheophytin b. Use these
values to help identify which spots are due to those compounds. Use the pure extract of
ßcarotene to identify the location of that band.
3. Identification of naphthodianthrones:
Draw a light pencil line about 1 cm from the end of a chromatographic plate, and
on this line spot aspirin, acetaminophen, ibuprofen, and caffeine, which are available as
reference standards. Use a separate capillary for each standard. Make each spot as
small as possible, preferably less than 0.5 mm in diameter. Use the blower to facilitate
the evaporation of the solvent between pplications. Examine the plate under the
ultraviolet (UV) light to see that enough of each compound has been applied; if not, add
more. On a separate plate run three of the unknowns and one of the aspirin
standard.The unknown sample is prepared by crushing a part of a tablet, adding this
powder to a test tube or small vial along with an appropriate amount of ethanol, and
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then mixing the suspension. Not all of the tablet will dissolve, but enough will go into
solution to spot the plate.
The binder starch or silica will not dissolve. The 1% solutions should be prepared
and ready to use. After the solvent has risen to about 2/3 of the length of the plate, remove
the plate from the developing chamber. Quickly mark the solvent front with a pencil and
allow the solvent to dry. Examine the plate under UV light to see the components as dark
spots against a bright green-blue background. Outline the spots with a pencil. The spots can
also be visualized by putting the plate in an iodine chamber made by placing a few crystals
of iodine in the bottom of a capped jar. Calculate the Rf values for the spots.
TLC has been used for separating cationic, anionic, purely covalent species and also organic
derivatives of the metals. In order to carry out TLC of groups of cations, silica gel is first washed
with acid and water to remove impurities of sodium, magnesium, calcium and iron. But this
treatment removes the calcium sulphate binder. Therefore, calcium sulphate must be replaced by
starch or some other suitable binder. After washing and drying of TLC plate, the spots of cations or
anions to be separated are applied on this plate. The plate is then kept in a close chamber and the
lower part of the plate is then dipped into a solvent. It is than removed from chamber and dried,
visualized for spots by suitable visualizing reagents.
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CONCLUSION
In the thin layer chromatography experiment, as the mobile phase rose up on the TLC
plate it dragged the ink from the marked dot up along the TLC plate. The pigment that was
closer to the marked dot was more attracted to the stationary phase, the silica gel. The
pigment that traveled the farthest up on the TLC plate more attracted to the mobile phase,
the hexane and ethyl acetate solvent. From the results, out of the top four pigments that
traveled the farthest, the light pink pigment whose Rf was 0.98 had the greatest affinity to
the mobile phase. The dark pink spot that had an Rf of 0.72 was the closest to the marked
dot therefore had a greater affinity to the stationary phase. In the column chromatography
experiment the dye that separated first was the royal blue dye. This meant that the royal
blue dye was more attracted to the ethanol solvent thus separating faster. The green dye
in test tube three represented the dye component in the original dye mixture that took
more time to separate as it was more attracted to the alumina powder. The first color dot
on the TLC plate had the longest retention factor of 0.98. This meant that the light pink dye
in the black ink mixture had the highest affinity to the mobile phase, which was the hexane
and ethyl acetate solvent.
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REFERENCES
1. Singhal S., Singhal N., Agarwal S., Pharmaceutical Analysis II, Thin layer
chromatography, Pragati prakashan, First
edition, 2009, 98-111.
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analysis, Instrumental
methods, Nirali Prakashan, 9th edition, 2005, vol II, 18-30.
4. Skoog D. A., Holler F.J. and Nieman T.A., “Principles of instrumental analysis, Saunders
college publishing, 5th
edition, 2006 ,761-766.
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8. Sharma B.K., Instrumental methods of chemical analysis, Goel publishing house, Meerut,
5th edition, 2007, 241-264.
9. Vidya Sagar, Instrumental methods of drug analysis, Pharma Med Press, First edition
2009,263.
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