An ion mobility detector that has been specifically developed for interfacing with capillary gas chromatography is investigated in the negative ion mode. Like the electron capture detector, to which this instrument is closely related, the ion mobility detector shows an enhanced response to low molec
Detection limits of an ion mobility detector after capillary gas chromatography
β Scribed by Robert H. St. Louis; William F. Siems; Herbert H. Hill Jr.
- Book ID
- 102944444
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 661 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1040-7685
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A method for setting gating parameters is presented that maximizes response in ion mobility detection following capillary gas chromatography. The method requires knowledge of the drift times of the product ion or ions of interest and the drift times of the reactant ions. These values are obtainable from ion mobility spectra captured after capillary gas chromatography.
The capillary insertion distance into the ion source and the presence or absence of an aperture grid were also found to have considerable effect on chromatographic response. Under optimized conditions, minimum detectable limits of <1 fmol/s are reported for tributylamine, phenyl sulfide, and tributyl phosphate. These values demonstrate significant improvements over reported detection limits of organics by the flame ionization detector and sulfurβcontaining species by the flame photometric detector. The values show slight improvement over those reported for detection of nitrogen and are comparable to those reported for detection of phosphorusβcontaining species by the thermionization detector.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The ion mobility detector is a device that can be used for the selective, ultratrace detection of organic compounds after capillary gas chromatography. It is the only gas chromatographic detector which does not require heteroatomic compounds for selective response, yet concern is often expressed ove
## Abstract This paper reports the first investigation of electron capture ion mobility spectrometry as a detection method for capillary gas chromatography. In previous work with negative ion mobility detection after gas chromatography, the principal reactant ion species were O~2~^β^ or hydrated O~