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Amélie D’Attoma

Researcher at University of Lyon

Publications -  5
Citations -  252

Amélie D’Attoma is an academic researcher from University of Lyon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Hydrophilic interaction chromatography & Two-dimensional chromatography. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 222 citations.

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On-line comprehensive two-dimensional separations of charged compounds using reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography and hydrophilic interaction chromatography. Part I: orthogonality and practical peak capacity considerations.

TL;DR: A comparative study of different sets of chromatographic conditions including stationary phase, mobile phase and column temperature was carried out with mixtures of representative solutes in order to find out the best two-dimensional analytical conditions for charged compounds.
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Optimization of conditions in on-line comprehensive two-dimensional reversed phase liquid chromatography. Experimental comparison with one-dimensional reversed phase liquid chromatography for the separation of peptides

TL;DR: A procedure for RPLC×RPLC separations able to define, for a given analysis time, the optimized LC×LC parameters for achieving the best compromise between high peak capacity and low dilution is proposed.
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On-line comprehensive two dimensional separations of charged compounds using reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography and hydrophilic interaction chromatography. Part II: application to the separation of peptides.

TL;DR: A ten-fold gain in analysis time along with a significant gain in peak capacity are obtained with both systems compared to the most efficient one-dimensional separation of peptides recently published.
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Development of on-line comprehensive two-dimensional liquid chromatography method for the separation of biomass compounds

TL;DR: Comprehensive on-line two-dimensional liquid chromatography was used for the characterization of bio-oils obtained by fast pyrolysis of lignocellulosic biomass, and the best of both techniques was applied to the separation of the aqueous phase of a partially dehydroxygenated bio-oil.
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Effect of pH additive and column temperature on kinetic performance of two different sub-2 μm stationary phases for ultrafast separation of charged analytes.

TL;DR: It was found that column performance was strongly dependent on the type of stationary phase, especially in acidic medium, and ammonia acetate at neutral pH led to the best results in terms of both efficiency and peak capacity.