## Abstract Discrimination may occur when injecting samples onto gas chromatography capillary columns, whereby peak areas for higher boiling point compounds are smaller than they should be compared to lower boiling compounds. This problem is most important in quantitative work on solutes having a w
Increased on-column injection temperature for gas chromatography
✍ Scribed by Janák, Karel ;Colmsjö, Anders ;Östman, Conny
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 441 KB
- Volume
- 18
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0935-6304
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
A way of controlling the maximum allowable oven temperature during on‐column injection by the column pressure drop is suggested. An arrangement using a restriction at the column outlet for adjustment of the column inlet pressure while maintaining the same column flow has been studied. Compared to non‐restricted flow, substantially increased maximum oven temperatures were obtained during on‐column injection. Injections at elevated temperatures resulted in an increased speed of analysis and decreased solute adsorption on the surface of the contaminated retention gap. The method is generally applicable to analysis of high boiling mixtures. In particular, with GC‐AED, such an arrangement yields a higher sensitivity due to an increased solute interaction with the excitation plasma.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Automated large volume (25-200 1-11) on-column injections into a gas chromatograph with a capillary column were successfully performed by coupling a retention gap technique with an air actuated rotary valve. The linearity, injection precision, and carryover were evaluated. Slight boiling point discr
## Abstract The use of high‐temperature‐stable, medium polarity glass capillary columns coated with immobilized PS‐090 (a 20 % diphenyl‐substituted, CH~3~O‐terminated polydimethylsiloxane) has made it possible to analyze routinely, and with good separation efficiency, high molecular weight compound