Georges A. Guiochon graduated in 1953 with a MS degree in engineering at Ecole Polytechnique (Paris, France) and received a Ph.D. in chemistry from the University of Paris (France) in 1958. He was a Professor of chemistry at Ecole Polytechnique (1958-1985) and at the University Pierre et Marie Curie of Paris (1968-1984), then at Georgetown University, Washington, D.C. (1984-1987). He was appointed a Distinguished Professor at the University of Tennessee (Department of Chemistry) and a Senior Scientist at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (Division of Chemical Sciences) in June 1987.
Articles
An Estimation of the Column Efficiency Made by Analyzing Tailing Peak Profiles (with Kanji Miyabe, Yuko Matsumoto, Yusuke Niwa, and Nobuho Ando), Journal of Chromatography A (2009)
It has been shown previously that most columns are not radially homogeneous but exhibit radial...
Comprehensive Off-Line, Two-Dimensional Liquid Chromatography. Application to the Separation of Peptide Digests (with Nicola Marchetti and Jacob N. Fairchild), Analytical Chemistry (2008)
The separation of the peptide digests of myoglobin and bovine serum albumin was performed with...
Heterogeneity of the Adsorption Mechanism of Low Molecular Weight Compounds in Reversed-Phase Liquid Chromatography (with Fabrice Gritti), Analytical Chemistry (2006)
The retention mechanism in RPLC mode was investigated based on the acquisition of adsorption isotherm...
Critical contribution of nonlinear chromatography to the understanding of retention mechanism in reversed-phase liquid chromatography (with Fabrice Gritti), Journal of Chromatography A (2005)
The retention of most compounds in RPLC proceeds through a combination of several independent mechanisms....
Evidence of a Wall Friction Effect in the Consolidation of Beds of Packing Materials in Chromatographic Columns (with Eric Drumm and Djamel Cherrak), Journal of Chromatography A (1999)
Experimental observations demonstrate the intensity of the friction between the bed of a packed chromatographic...