Phospholipid bilayer coatings can prevent adsorption of cationic proteins on the surface of fused silica capillaries used in capillary electrophoresis. However, the performance of such bilayer coatings is strongly dependent on solution conditions. The factors affecting the rate of formation of phospholipid bilayer coatings were investigated using the double-chained zwitterionic 1,2-dimyristoyl-sn-glycero-phosphocholine (DMPC, C(14)) as a model phospholipid. The effectiveness of these coatings for CE separations of model cationic lysozyme, cytochrome c, ribonuclease A, and alpha-chymotrypsinogen A was also assessed. Increasing the ionic strength of a 0.1 mM DMPC solution reduced capillary coat times from >2 hours in 2.5 mM Tris (pH 7.4) buffer to 3.4 min in 40 mM Tris and dramatically improved separation performance such that > or =1.4 x 10(5) plates/m were observed in capillaries coated for 5 min with 0.1 mM DMPC in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4). The presence of Ca(2+) in the coating solution also increases the rate of formation of the phospholipid bilayer coating. The type of vesicle strongly affects its adsorption rate onto the silica surface. The time required to coat the capillary was 7.2 min for small unilamellar vesicles (SUVs) and 22.5 min for large unilamellar vesicles and excessively long for multilamellar vesicles. Highest efficiency protein separations were achieved with bilayer coatings prepared from SUVs. The coating rate was enhanced by using greater DMPC concentrations and unaffected by pH. The type of buffer present in the DMPC coating solution affects the coating behavior, with HEPES buffer yielding a faster coat time than either Tris or phosphate buffers. Histone H1 was separated on a 0.1 mM DMPC-coated capillary.