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Chem. 231

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Title: Chem. 231


1
Chem. 231 2/25 Lecture
2
Announcements
  • Quiz 2 Today
  • New Homework Pass out
  • Set 1 Labs
  • should be finishing by next week
  • Todays Lecture
  • Practical Aspects of GC

3
Practical Aspects of GCSample and Analyte Types
  • Because GC performance generally exceeds HPLC in
    most categories, GC is often considered even if
    not ideal
  • Main Requirements
  • Analyte must be capable of moving through column
    and being detected
  • Rest of sample should not interfere with analysis
    or lead to degradation of method

4
Practical Aspects of GCSample and Analyte Types
  • Analyte Considerations
  • Based on volatility
  • permanent gases
  • semi-volatile compounds
  • non-volatile compounds
  • Other requirements
  • stability in column
  • lack of secondary retention (e.g. carboxylic
    acids often interact with small percent of column
    uncoated by stationary phase)
  • Based on detectability
  • must be detectable
  • in complex samples, may need specific detector

5
Practical Aspects of GCSample and Analyte Types
  • Volatility
  • Permanent gases
  • often require cyrogenic cooling of column oven
  • may require specific injection techniques
  • Semi-volatile compounds
  • most common, particularly as solute
  • direct injection as gases is difficult (due to
    partitioning to other phases)
  • Non-volatile compounds
  • can be derivatized (usually to less polar
    derivatives such as conversion from carboxylic
    acid to ester)
  • pyrolysis methods

6
Practical Aspects of GCSample and Analyte Types
  • Sample Interferences (must be minimized)
  • Non-volatile compounds
  • will be permanently retained on column,
    eventually changing column behavior
  • Problematic compounds
  • polar compounds (e.g. water) often damage column
    stationary phase
  • thermally labile compounds can disintegrate upon
    heating
  • some compounds interfere with normal detector
    response (O2 in ECDs)
  • Compounds that overlap with analyte

7
Practical Aspects of GCSelection of
Instrumentation
  • Components should match needs from analyte and
    sample
  • Injectors
  • split/splitless is most common for liquids
  • split vs. splitless choice depends on 1)
    concentrations, 2) resolution needed, 3)
    sensitivity needed, 4) how volatile compound is
    vs. solvent
  • More on this next time
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