ABSTRACT
Horizontal flow-through coil planet centrifuge (CPC) and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) techniques were used for separation of polar compounds from a crude ethanol extract of Oxytropis ochrocephala Bunge, a poisonous legume plant widely distributed in northwestern China. The performance of these two chromatographic methods was compared in terms of column efficiency, peak resolution, separation time, sample loading capacity, etc. The results indicated that two polar compounds in the crude extract were equally well separated by these two methods. HPLC gave comparable peak resolution in shorter separation time while its sample loading capacity was limited to the mg range. The CPC method required a long separation time, but yielded a higher purity of fractions with a much greater capacity.