To become familiar with the technique in a real laboratory, you can watch this video
This experiment may be done with two types of samples. Please choose one of them:
To guide identification, 5 standards are available: solutions of a pure pigment in acetone:
1: Samples and standards are applied on the plate covered with silica gel (stationary phase for the chromatography)
2: The plate is introduced into the tank containing the mobile phase (a mixture of solvents: hexane, acetone and chloroform in 3:1:1 ratio), the tank is covered and we wait for the mobile phase to ascend; it is stopped by switching to step 3.
3: The plate is extracted, we wait for the solvent to evaporate and we proceed to study the results.
In your lab notebook: write down the code assigned to your experiment (in this case it is and what you have applied on each position in the plate. Add the photo of the result. Justify the different mobility of each standard relating them to their structure. By comparing the result of samples to that of standards, explain which types of pigment each sample contains.
* The original extract which was subjected to chromatography came from spinach, chard or microalgae, and was applied on a column filled with activated alumina. Chromatographic fraction number 1 resulted from elution with hexane; fraction number 2 was obtained with a latter elution with acetone.
Offered for use under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution – NonCommercial – ShareAlike License.
Programmed in HTML5, CSS and JavaScript and foreseeably compatible with all types of web browsers, operating systems and devices. Features are used from the open surce libraries Dragula (by bevacqua, MIT License), DOM to Image (Anatolii Saienko and Paul Bakaus, MIT License), as well as TinyBox.
Based on Rf data from C. Reiss (1994) Experiments in Plant Physiology. Prentice Hall. ISBN 0137012853, cited by Josep Tarragó-Celada and Josep Mª Fernández Novell (2019) Colour, chlorophyll and chromatography. Science in School 47:41-45.