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Dive into the research topics where Tibor Macko is active.

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Featured researches published by Tibor Macko.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

High-temperature two-dimensional liquid chromatography of ethylene-vinylacetate copolymers

Anton Ginzburg; Tibor Macko; Volker Dolle; Robert Brüll

Temperature rising elution fractionation hyphenated to size exclusion chromatography (TREF×SEC) is a routine technique to determine the chemical heterogeneity of semicrystalline olefin copolymers. Its applicability is limited to well crystallizing samples. High-temperature two-dimensional liquid chromatography, HT 2D-LC, where the chromatographic separation by HPLC is hyphenated to SEC (HPLC×SEC) holds the promise to separate such materials irrespective of their crystallizability. A model blend consisting of ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA) copolymers covering a broad range of chemical composition distribution including amorphous and semicrystalline copolymers and a polyethylene standard was separated by HT 2D-LC at 140°C. Both axes of the contour plot, i.e. the compositional axis from the HPLC and the molar mass axis from the SEC separation were calibrated for the first time. Therefore, a new approach to determine the void and dwell volume of the developed HT 2D-LC instrument was applied. The results from the HT 2D-LC separation are compared to those from a cross-fractionation (TREF×SEC) experiment.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Characterization of branched ultrahigh molar mass polymers by asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation and size exclusion chromatography

T. Otte; Harald Pasch; Tibor Macko; Robert Brüll; Florian J. Stadler; Joachim Kaschta; Florian Becker; Michael Buback

The molar mass distribution (MMD) of synthetic polymers is frequently analyzed by size exclusion chromatography (SEC) coupled to multi angle light scattering (MALS) detection. For ultrahigh molar mass (UHM) or branched polymers this method is not sufficient, because shear degradation and abnormal elution effects falsify the calculated molar mass distribution and information on branching. High temperatures above 130 °C have to be applied for dissolution and separation of semi-crystalline materials like polyolefins which requires special hardware setups. Asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) offers the possibility to overcome some of the main problems of SEC due to the absence of an obstructing porous stationary phase. The SEC-separation mainly depends on the pore size distribution of the used column set. The analyte molecules can enter the pores of the stationary phase in dependence on their hydrodynamic volume. The archived separation is a result of the retention time of the analyte species inside SEC-column which depends on the accessibility of the pores, the residence time inside the pores and the diffusion ability of the analyte molecules. The elution order in SEC is typically from low to high hydrodynamic volume. On the contrary AF4 separates according to the diffusion coefficient of the analyte molecules as long as the chosen conditions support the normal FFF-separation mechanism. The separation takes place in an empty channel and is caused by a cross-flow field perpendicular to the solvent flow. The analyte molecules will arrange in different channel heights depending on the diffusion coefficients. The parabolic-shaped flow profile inside the channel leads to different elution velocities. The species with low hydrodynamic volume will elute first while the species with high hydrodynamic volume elute later. The AF4 can be performed at ambient or high temperature (AT-/HT-AF4). We have analyzed one low molar mass polyethylene sample and a number of narrow distributed polystyrene standards as reference materials with known structure by AT/HT-SEC and AT/HT-AF4. Low density polyethylenes as well as polypropylene and polybutadiene, containing high degrees of branching and high molar masses, have been analyzed with both methods. As in SEC the relationship between the radius of gyration (R(g)) or the molar mass and the elution volume is curved up towards high elution volumes, a correct calculation of the MMD and the molar mass average or branching ratio is not possible using the data from the SEC measurements. In contrast to SEC, AF4 allows the precise determination of the MMD, the molar mass averages as well as the degree of branching because the molar mass vs. elution volume curve and the conformation plot is not falsified in this technique. In addition, higher molar masses can be detected using HT-AF4 due to the absence of significant shear degradation in the channel. As a result the average molar masses obtained from AF4 are higher compared to SEC. The analysis time in AF4 is comparable to that of SEC but the adjustable cross-flow program allows the user to influence the separation efficiency which is not possible in SEC without a costly change of the whole column combination.


Journal of Separation Science | 2010

A review on the development of liquid chromatography systems for polyolefins

Tibor Macko; Robert Brüll; Yutian Zhu; Yongmei Wang

Polyolefins are the most widely produced synthetic polymer commodity and are found in countless applications ranging from bottles, packaging films to bullet-proof jackets, etc. Such widely different applications rely on high variability in the physical properties of polyolefins, which is a result of variations in microstructure, chemical composition and molar mass. Though polyolefins contain only carbon (C) and hydrogen (H) atoms, the microstructures of polyolefins are extremely variable, differing in the nature of the monomers (e.g. ethylene versus propylene), the degree of branching, chemical composition in the case of copolymers and finally their molar masses. Production, research and development of polyolefins require the analysis of polyolefin samples in terms of all these parameters. Development of efficient and robust analytical techniques based on the interactive LC is reviewed. The needed computational/theoretical studies to understand the retention mechanism in the newly developed chromatography systems are discussed.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2003

Adsorption of polyethylene standards from decalin on liquid chromatography column packings

Tibor Macko; Harald Pasch; Joeri F. M. Denayer

Linear polyethylene and isotactic polypropylene standards were injected into columns which contained MFI (SH-300 and silicalite) or faujasite (CBV-780) type zeolites. 1,2,4-Trichlorobenzene, cyclohexanone, 2-ethyl-hexanol, decalin and tetralin were used as mobile phases at 140 degrees C. It was found that polyethylene is fully retained on zeolite SH-300 when decalin is used as a mobile phase. Moreover, polyethylene is partially retained on zeolite SH-300 from tetralin and from 1,2,4-tichlorobenzene, on silicalite from decalin and in a very small extent on zeolite CBV-780 from decalin. Using all other solvents, polyethylene and polypropylene were not retained in any of the columns tested. This is the first experimental observation of polyethylene adsorption from a solvent on a chromatographic stationary phase.


Archive | 2012

Recent Advances in High-Temperature Fractionation of Polyolefins

Harald Pasch; Muhammad Imran Malik; Tibor Macko

The synthesis and characterization of polyolefins continues to be one of the most important areas for academic and industrial research. One consequence of the development of new “tailor-made” polyolefins is the need for new and improved analytical techniques for the analysis of polyolefins with respect to molar mass, molecular topology and chemical composition distribution. This review presents different new and relevant techniques for polyolefin analysis. The analysis of copolymers by combining high-temperature SEC and FTIR spectroscopy yields information on chemical composition and molecular topology as a function of molar mass. Crystallization based fractionation techniques are powerful methods for the analysis of short-chain branching in LLDPE and the analysis of polyolefin blends. These methods include temperature-rising elution fractionation, crystallization analysis fractionation and the recently developed crystallization-elution fractionation.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

Optimisation of ambient and high temperature asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation with dual/multi-angle light scattering and infrared/refractive index detection

T. Otte; Robert Brüll; Tibor Macko; Harald Pasch; T. Klein

Asymmetric flow field-flow fractionation (AF4) enables to analyse polymers with very high molar masses under mild conditions in comparison to size exclusion chromatography (SEC). Conventionally, membranes for AF4 are made from cellulose. Recently, a novel ceramic membrane has been developed which can withstand high temperatures above 130 degrees C and chlorinated organic solvents, thus making it possible to characterise semicrystalline polyolefins by HT-AF4. Two ceramic membranes and one cellulose membrane were compared with regard to their quality of molar mass separation and the loss of the polymer material through the pores. Separating polystyrene standards as model compounds at different cross-flow gradients the complex relationship between cross-flow velocity, separation efficiency, the molar mass and peak broadening could be elucidated in detail. Moreover, the dependence of signal quality and reproducibility on sample concentration and mass loading was investigated because the evaluation of the obtained fractograms substantially depends on the signal intensities. Finally, the performance of the whole system was tested at high temperature by separating PE reference materials of high molar mass.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2013

Application of the evaporative light scattering detector to analytical problems in polymer science

Jan‐Hendrik Arndt; Tibor Macko; Robert Brüll

Over the last two decades the evaporative light scattering detector (ELSD) has found more and more use in liquid chromatography (LC) of synthetic polymers. The reason behind this is that it can be used for a significantly wider variety of analyte/solvent combinations. Although in many of the applications the ELSD has been used in a qualitative manner, it can also be used quantitatively. For quantitative interpretation of analyses it is, in the case of synthetic polymers, essential to know how parameters, which characterize a polymer sample (i.e., molar mass and chemical composition), as well as parameters, which are a consequence of the LC separation (i.e., composition and flow rate of the mobile phase, its composition), influence the response of the ELSD. This review gives a tabulated overview over applications of ELS detectors in polymer analysis. The influence of parameters arising from either the polymer side or the chromatographic separation is discussed in detail and, in addition, the influence of the ELS detectors running conditions, i.e. type and flow rate of gas and temperature of nebulizer and evaporator), will be reviewed. This information will prove valuable whenever the calibration of an ELSD for the quantitative analysis of synthetic polymers is attempted.


International Journal of Polymer Analysis and Characterization | 2006

High-Temperature Liquid Chromatography at Critical Conditions: Separation of Polystyrene from Blends with Polyethylene and Ethylene-Styrene Block Copolymers

Lars-Christian Heinz; Tibor Macko; Harald Pasch; Marc-Stephan Weiser; Rolf Mülhaupt

ABSTRACT Liquid chromatography at critical conditions (LCCC) is an important tool for the separation of complex polymers according to chemical composition. For ambient temperatures more than 150 different LCCC separation systems are known, while at temperatures that are suitable for chromatography of polyolefins (i.e. > 130°C) not a single system is known from literature. In this article we present LCCC conditions for polystyrene at a temperature of 140°C and their application to the analysis of polymer blends composed of polystyrene and polyethylene or styrene-ethylene block copolymers.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2010

Elution behavior of polyethylene and polypropylene standards on carbon sorbents

Rajesh Chitta; Tibor Macko; Robert Brüll; Grid Kalies

The elution behavior of linear polyethylene and isotactic, atactic and syndiotactic polypropylene was tested using three different carbon column packings: porous graphite (Hypercarb), porous zirconium oxide covered with carbon (ZirChrom-CARB), and activated carbon TA 95. Several polar solvents with boiling points above 150°C were selected as mobile phases: 2-ethyl-1-hexanol, n-decanol, cyclohexylacetate, hexylacetate, cyclohexanone, ethylene glycol monobutyl ether and one non-polar solvent, n-decane. Polyethylene standards were completely or partially adsorbed in all tested sorbent/solvent systems. Polypropylene standards were partially adsorbed on Hypercarb and carbon TA95, but did not adsorb on ZirChrom-CARB. ZirChrom-CARB retained polyethylene pronouncedly when 2-ethyl-1-hexanol, cyclohexylacetate or hexylacetate were used as mobile phases at temperature 150 or 160°C, while all three basic stereoisomers of polypropylene eluted in size exclusion mode in these sorbent/solvent pairs. This is very different from the system Hypercarb/1-decanol, which separated polypropylene according to its tacticity. The opposite elution behavior of polyethylene and polypropylene in system ZirChrom-CARB/2-ethyl-1-hexanol (polypropylene eluted, polyethylene fully adsorbed) enabled to realize separation of blends of polyethylene and polypropylene. Ethylene/1-hexene copolymers were separated according to their chemical composition using system Hypercarb/2-ethyl-1-hexanol/1,2,4-trichlorobenzene.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2011

Study of the abnormal late co-elution phenomenon of low density polyethylene in size exclusion chromatography using high temperature size exclusion chromatography and high temperature asymmetrical flow field-flow fractionation

T. Otte; T. Klein; Robert Brüll; Tibor Macko; Harald Pasch

The elution behaviour of linear and branched polyethylene samples in SEC was studied. For the branched samples an abnormal late co-elution of large and small macromolecules manifests itself as an abnormal re-increase of the molar mass and the radius of gyration values detected with multi angle light scattering at high elution volumes in SEC. The late co-elution of small and large macromolecules cannot be explained by the SEC mechanism alone. The influence of several experimental parameters on the late co-elution was studied. It was found that the type of SEC column and the flow rate have a significant influence. The late eluting part of the sample was fractionated and separated by HT-SEC- and HT-AF4-MALS. The different results of both methods have been discussed with the aim to find possible explanations for the late elution. The experiments indicate that especially large branched structures show an increased tendency for the phenomenon.

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Harald Pasch

Stellenbosch University

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Robbert Duchateau

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Camille Descour

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Dario Cavallo

Eindhoven University of Technology

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