Hydrophilic interaction chromatography
Hydrophilic interaction chromatography (or hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography, HILIC) is a type of liquid chromatography that uses a hydrophilic stationary phase and a high-organic mobile phase for the separation of analytes by polarity. While it is not as popular as some other types of liquid chromatography, the number of scientific publications using HILIC have greatly increased since the early 2000s. HILIC is similar to reverse phase chromatography in its mobile phase composition, and also to normal phase chromatography, with its polar stationary phase. It also has overlap with ion exchange chromatography. Sometimes, HILIC is considered to be a hybrid of these techniques.
HILIC was named in 1990 by Andrew Alpert, who described it as a type of liquid-liquid partition chromatography. He suggested that analytes elute in order of increasing polarity, a conclusion supported by review and re-evaluation of published data. The mechanism for HILIC is still not entirely understood, but it is thought to rely on analytes partitioning between the organic-rich mobile phase and a water-enriched layer that forms of the surface of the polar stationary phase, in a liquid-liquid extraction system. More polar analytes will have stronger interactions with the water-enriched layer and with the column itself, therefore being retained on the column for longer.