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Sabine Heinisch

Researcher at University of Lyon

Publications -  48
Citations -  1118

Sabine Heinisch is an academic researcher from University of Lyon. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reversed-phase chromatography & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 40 publications receiving 855 citations.

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Great Improvement of Chromatographic Performance Using MCM-41 Spheres as Stationary Phase in HPLC

TL;DR: Grafted MCM-41 materials are ordered mesoporous adsorbents suitable for reversed phase liquid chromatography applications (RP-HPLC): they possess high surface area, which is a great advantage to enhance the thermodynamic behavior of the classical stationary phase by increasing solute retention.
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Two-dimensional liquid chromatography in pharmaceutical analysis. Instrumental aspects, trends and applications.

TL;DR: The objective of this review is to give an overview of past, current and emerging trends in 2D‐LC techniques applied to pharmaceutical compounds to predict future advances in two‐dimensional separation techniqes for pharmaceutical analysis.
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An Online Four-Dimensional HIC×SEC-IM×MS Methodology for Proof-of-Concept Characterization of Antibody Drug Conjugates

TL;DR: An innovative multidimensional analytical approach combining comprehensive online two-dimensional (2D)-chromatography that consists of HIC and size-exclusion chromatography (SEC), to ion mobility and mass spectrometry (IM-MS) for performing analytical characterization of ADCs under nondenaturing conditions is presented.
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What are the current solutions for interfacing supercritical fluid chromatography and mass spectrometry

TL;DR: The goal of this review is to describe the various SFC-MS interfaces and highlight the most favorable ones in terms of reliability, flexibility, sensitivity and user-friendliness.
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Evaluation of columns packed with shell particles with compounds of pharmaceutical interest.

TL;DR: The commercial C18 columns packed with sub-3 μm shell particles were tested and compared to a reference UHPLC column, in terms of kinetic performance as well as selectivity, retention capability, peak shape and loading capacity, and a set of pharmaceutically relevant molecules was selected.