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- Posts: 46
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What about using Argon as a carrier gas?
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Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.

Dear DR,H>He>N>Ar in terms of separation quality
and your source [1] does not provide a reliable experimental evidence for The Claim either.of the 3 conventional gases N2, He & H2, nitrogen has the lowest HEPT at the optimum velocity
I got from the book " Chromatography today" by Colin F. Poole and Salwa K. Poole.Dear thohry,
I am sorry, but there is no theoretical foundation for
The Claim:and your source [1] does not provide a reliable experimental evidence for The Claim either.of the 3 conventional gases N2, He & H2, nitrogen has the lowest HEPT at the optimum velocity
.
.
Sources:
[1] http://www.chem.agilent.com/cag/cabu/carriergas.htm
[2] Rooney, T. A., "Theory of Chromatography", in: Freeman, R. R., High Resolution Gas Chromatography, Hewlett-Packard Co., 1979, pp. 7-21.
Certainly I did not intend to insult anyone. More than that, I was glad to learn that there are “thousands of chromatographers that use H2â€Imb, so all of us thousands of chromatographers that use H2 are masochistic ("H2 is dangerous", etc.) idiots?
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