The preprint of this paper is on the blog here somewhere I think, but this paper has progressed quite a bit since the initial posting.
I'm pretty sure the preprint used just standard "Whisper" 40 and 80SPD. It's been a while, but that's my recollection. Those methods are somewhere in the 100nL/min elution range, though if you watch the EvoSep monitor closely it sort of goes to 50nL/min but maybe just for equilibration purposes. This appears to feature the new EvoSep WhisperZoom methods which are 200nL/min, or what you might consider ...the default method on your instrument for nanoflow liquid chromatography...
The authors also decided to add a completely unnecessary new name to their method because the one thing we need while mass spectrometry based proteomics is rapidly being displaced by "next gen" technologies is more confusing nomenclature. What's Chip-Tip? It's using a CellenOne to load a 96 well plate that can be loaded into EvoTips. It's a vendor provided protocol that you can purchase right now, and name whatever you want. You put down like $1.7M for this whole workflow if your vendors really really like you, you can call it whatever silly thing you want to. Snarky annoyance aside this is both interesting and useful information --
In this iteration, which I do not have the time to read fully (disclaimer - I'm skimming and running an excitingly high fever) - they do employ the WhisperZoom methods which now go up to 120SPD. That's one single cell every 12 minutes! On a standard commercial system! I've got some of those small Whisper columns here and I'm taking one apart when the emitter inevitably clogs to figure out how much C-18 is actually in it, but it's probably like 5cm.
How's the chromatography on a 5cm column on an Orbitrap based system running 4amu Asstral windows? Here are some of my favorite examples from the nifty new DIA-NN viewer!
Sweet! You don't get much more gaussian than a literal f'ing triangle!
Here's a Rhombus! Is that a rhombus? Maybe it's the fever but I initally thought Wesley Snipes would carry something with an end this shape vampire hunting.
There are good ones here, though. I was just jumping through one file after thinking - wow - that seems like a slow method for a really really fast chromatography gradient. Here's a really good one.
For real - an astouding protein coverage for a single actual cell!