Normal Phase vs Reverse Phase Chromatography: Key Differences Explained
Normal phase chromatography uses a polar stationary phase (e.g., silica) and a non-polar solvent, while reverse phase chromatography flips the script: a non-polar stationary phase (e.g., C18) with a polar solvent like water plus organic modifier.
Because “normal” sounds like the default, new lab techs assume it’s always best—then watch hydrophobic samples crash out. In reality, “reverse” is the workhorse for most pharmaceuticals, vitamins, and even your coffee’s caffeine check.
Key Differences
Normal phase: polar compounds elute last, organic solvents dominate, ideal for isomers. Reverse phase: non-polar compounds elute last, aqueous buffers rule, better for peptides and everyday drugs.
Which One Should You Choose?
If your molecule loves water and hates oil, pick reverse phase; if it’s greasy and fragile, stick with normal. Check solubility first—90 % of bioassays quietly demand reverse.
Examples and Daily Life
Testing vitamin D capsules? Reverse phase with methanol-water separates D2 from D3 cleanly. Separating plant pigments for natural dye? Normal phase on silica with hexane nails it.
Can I switch columns mid-sequence?
Yes, but flush lines thoroughly; solvent mismatch can crack the stationary phase or ghost peaks.
Why does my reverse-phase run show tailing?
Silanol groups on older columns can interact with basic analytes—add 0.1 % formic acid or upgrade to end-capped C18.