by
wss » Thu Oct 15, 2020 9:30 pm
Are you running split injections?
I didn't see you mention the split trap in your consumable replacement. If not, it's a worthwhile place to check. I've seen inconsistent peak areas from this trap being saturated/partially blocked.
Yes we are running split injections, I don't believe we have a split vent trap installed on this instrument.
Could you go into detail a bit about what inconsistencies you're seeing? Also, what are you analyzing?
We use the instrument to analyse for the USEPA 8260 suite. In terms of inconsistencies, there's almost a doubling and halving effect between runs. Take for example our dibromofluoromethane surrogate - the responses over 8 runs will look like this:
839043.5485
466252.5515
808309.0815
555656.404
460504.9385
750522.6485
445331.6745
Does it affect the higher boiling 1,4-Dichlorobenzene-d4 more than the lower boiling Fluorobenzene internal standard(if you are using those)?
We're not using exactly those standards, but it appears to affect the lower boiling standards more than the higher boiling ones (e.g. much greater swing between runs).
Have you checked the mass alignment? Look at the spectra of the internal standard in question and zoom in on the quantitation mass and see if it has shifted(especially to the lower side) from what you have set in the quant database. If it shifts enough that one run you get the whole amount and the next the majority of the peak is just outside the mass window it looks for then you can get this type of problem. Can usually be fixed by simply doing a mass update in the quant software.
I haven't checked this yet, but I'll give it a look today. Thanks.