Chromatography — Principles, Types & Key Concepts
Concise, exam-ready notes on chromatography: stationary & mobile phases, column chromatography, thin-layer & paper chromatography, partition vs adsorption techniques.
What is Chromatography?
Chromatography is a powerful physical separation technique used to separate, purify and identify components in a mixture. According to IUPAC, it involves two phases — a stationary phase and a mobile phase — with analytes partitioning between them.
Stationary & Mobile Phases — core idea
- Stationary phase: Fixed phase where components can adsorb or dissolve. Comes as packed columns (column chromatography), thin layers on plates (TLC), or paper pores (paper chromatography).
- Mobile phase: Fluid that moves through or over the stationary phase — can be a liquid or a gas. Movement of components depends on their affinity to each phase.
Column Chromatography vs Thin-Layer Chromatography (TLC)
Column chromatography: Stationary phase is packed into a column; the mobile phase flows through under gravity or pressure. Great for preparative separation and purification.
Thin-Layer Chromatography (TLC): Stationary phase is a thin film (silica or alumina) coated on glass or plastic; the mobile phase rises by capillary action. TLC is fast, analytical and useful for monitoring reactions.
Partition Chromatography (Paper Chromatography)
Partition chromatography uses a thin film of liquid stationary phase adsorbed on an inert support; the mobile phase is usually a liquid or gas. Paper chromatography is a classical example: liquid retained in paper pores acts as the stationary phase while another liquid moves through, separating solutes by partitioning and adsorption.
Adsorption Chromatography
In adsorption chromatography the stationary phase is a finely divided solid (e.g., silica gel, alumina) and the mobile phase is typically liquid. Separation occurs because different components adsorb to the solid surface to different extents — stronger adsorption → slower movement.
Key Mechanism — Equilibrium Between Phases
All chromatographic separations are driven by an equilibrium: analyte molecules constantly distribute between the mobile and stationary phases. Components that interact strongly with the stationary phase spend more time bound and therefore move slower; components with weaker interaction move faster with the mobile phase.
Practical Tips & Exam Points
- Remember: Rf value in TLC = distance travelled by solute / distance travelled by solvent front — used for qualitative identification.
- Column chromatography is ideal for preparative separations; TLC is ideal for quick checks and analytical purposes.
- Partition vs adsorption: partition involves distribution between two liquids (one immobilized), adsorption involves surface binding to a solid.
- Polarity matters: polar solutes prefer polar stationary phases (e.g., silica) and move slower in non-polar mobile phases.
Summary — What to Remember
- Chromatography = separation technique using stationary + mobile phases.
- Stationary phase forms: packed columns, thin layers, or paper pores.
- TLC uses capillary action; column chromatography uses mobile phase flow through a packed column.
- Partition chromatography = liquid film on inert support (paper chromatography example).
- Adsorption chromatography = separation by selective adsorption on a solid surface.
- Stronger interaction with stationary phase → slower migration in the mobile phase.



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