Chromatographic separation, analysis and characterization of complex highly polar analyte mixtures can often be very challenging using conventional separation approaches. Analysis and purification of hydrophilic compounds have been dominated by liquid chromatography (LC) and ion-exchange chromatography (IC), with sub/supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) moving toward these new applications beyond traditional chiral separations. However, the low polarity of supercritical carbon dioxide (CO<sub>2</sub>) has limited the use of SFC for separation and purification in the bioanalytical space, especially at the preparative scale. Reaction mixtures of highly polar species are strongly retained even using polar additives in alcohol modifier/CO<sub>2</sub> based eluents. Herein, we overcome these problems by introducing chaotropic effects in SFC separations using a nontraditional mobile phase mixture consisting of ammonium hydroxide combined with high water concentration in the alcohol modifier and carbon dioxide. The separation mechanism was here elucidated based on extensive IC-CD (IC couple to conductivity detection) analysis of cyclic peptides subjected to the SFC conditions, indicating the <i>in situ</i> formation of a bicarbonate counterion (HCO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup>). In contrast to other salts, HCO<sub>3</sub><sup>-</sup> was found to play a crucial role acting as a chaotropic agent that disrupts undesired H-bonding interactions, which was demonstrated by size-exclusion chromatography coupled with differential hydrogen-deuterium exchange-mass spectrometry experiments (SEC-HDX-MS). In addition, the use of NH<sub>4</sub>OH in water-rich MeOH modifiers was compared to other commonly used basic additives (diethylamine, triethylamine, and isobutylamine) showing unmatched chromatographic and MS detection performance in terms of peak shape, retention, selectivity, and ionization as well as a completely different selectivity and retention behavior. Moreover, relative to ammonium formate and ammonium acetate in water-...