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Supercritical Fluid Chromatography (SFC)

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What is Supercritical Fluid Chromatography?
Explore Supercritical Fluid Chromatography (SFC) columns in Achiral and chiral modes. Learn more at Phenomenex.

What is Supercritical Fluid Chromatography?

Supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is an advanced separation technique that uses carbon dioxide (CO₂) above or near its critical state (temperature >31.1 °C and pressure >73.8 bar) as the primary mobile phase, often combined with a small percentage of organic modifiers such as methanol. Under these conditions, CO₂ exhibits both gas-like diffusivity and liquid-like solvating power, making it ideal for rapid and efficient separations.

This relatively non-polar mobile phase can be used with stationary phases commonly employed in normal -phase HPLC; however, SFC is a highly versatile technique that can also operate under conditions similar to reversed-phase or HILIC mode, depending on the choice of stationary phase, and mobile phase/modifier composition. Compared to conventional solvents, the low viscosity and high diffusivity of supercritical CO₂ enable much faster separations. SFC columns can be used in two main modes highlighting the unique flexibility of SFC in analytical separations:

Although still an emerging technique, supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) is gaining traction in pharmaceutical, environmental, and food industries. It offers significant economic advantages through faster run times and lower solvent usage, and is recognized as a more sustainable, “green” alternative to traditional normal-phase liquid chromatography. The economic benefits of SFC are especially evident in preparative LC separations, where lower solvent consumption and shorter purification cycles reduce operational costs and enhance throughput.

By shortening analysis times while maintaining high resolution, SFC provides a sustainable and cost-effective alternative to traditional HPLC methods.

SFC Columns