Compare two different analytical methods

Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.

5 posts Page 1 of 1
Hi at all,
i have made two different methods (one with Helium and the other with Hydrogen), i have calibration curves with a good R2 and i quantify the same compounds in both. My problem is that tha compounds quantification its's different in the two methods, but the calibration curve are good.
I don't know how to compare statistically the two methods.

suggestions?

thanks
General answer: Fisher's F-test & Student's t-test.
Best regards,
Dmitriy A. Perlow
nbellora wrote:
Hi at all,
i have made two different methods (one with Helium and the other with Hydrogen), i have calibration curves with a good R2 and i quantify the same compounds in both. My problem is that tha compounds quantification its's different in the two methods, but the calibration curve are good.
I don't know how to compare statistically the two methods.

suggestions?

thanks


Are you saying unknown samples are giving different results or the calibration standards have different results when quantified against the curve?

Is there 1% difference or 20% difference between the Helium and Hydrogen results?
The past is there to guide us into the future, not to dwell in.
The calibration curve in both it's good (R2 and accuracy are perfect). But the samples are different from 1% for triacetin and 20% for phenol.
I don't know if it is due to a different sensitivity of the two method.
I want to calculate LOD and LOQ of two methods and maybe made a sample with spike.
5 posts Page 1 of 1

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