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Resumen de Complete LabVIEW-Controlled HPLC Lab: An Advanced Undergraduate Experience

Douglas J. Beussman, John P. Walters

  • Virtually all modern chemical instrumentation is controlled by computers. While software packages are continually becoming easier to use, allowing for more researchers to utilize more complex instruments, conveying some level of understanding as to how computers and instruments communicate is still an important part of the undergraduate curriculum. Understanding how digital and analog signals are used to allow the smooth operation of an instrument allows the user to better understand the possible sources or problems when instruments stop working optimally. The experiment presented here allows students to investigate the communication between the computer and a high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system by allowing them to construct a LabVIEW-based control program. Student understanding of instrument control is reinforced by having them control pump speed, detector zeroing, and a solvent recycling valve while also monitoring the injection port status and the detector output. Students gain an understanding of the HPLC process by incorporating all of the instrument tasks into their control software and then use their system to analyze a mixture of five small organic molecules, thereby gaining insight into the chemical concepts underlying HPLC separations.


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