Supercritical Fluid - Instrumentation
The main components of the SFE instrument are a pump, an extraction chamber, a recovery chamber and a collection device.
In order to generate a supercritical fluid, carbon dioxide is pressurized above its critical pressure in a pump. The mixture to be separated is placed in the extraction chamber and put in contact with the supercritical fluid. One of the elements (component A) in the mixture dissolves better in the critical fluid and leaves the residue enriched in the other components. The loaded solvent is then transferred to a recovery chamber, where component A is recovered by lowering the solvent's density. This density can be achieved by raising the temperature at constant pressure but more often it is achieve by reducing the pressure at constant temperature. After depressurizing, two methods have been adopted for collection of the extracted analyses, these are on-line or off-line SFE.
In on-line SFE, the extracted analytes are direct coupled to a chromatographic separation system such as SFC, gas chromatography (GC) or high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) with appropriate detection. Directly coupled GC is limited to volatile compounds while SFE-SFC can be used for higher molecular weights.
The off-line approach allows the extraction and concentration of analytes for subsequent HPLC analysis.