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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Mon Mar 07, 2011 10:20 pm
Anyways. I've been having problems for the last year or so of RT drift on one of my GCs, an Agilent/Inficon 3000 MicroGC. I've dealt with it by updating the method as I go, but this GC does online monitoring and the more I push back my RTs the worse my sampling resolution gets. Right now its taking almost 4.5 minutes between each run. The limiting factor is hexene which comes in ~4 minutes.
I have 2 columns, a molsieve backflush with a PLOTU precolumn and an Al column
Some info.
1) Columns are ~10 years old
2) Previous owner never installed driers on carrier gas (sample gas is dry). It exclusively uses UHP carrier gas, but I don't buy that that is enough. When I have an acceptable level of downtime I will be installing a couple of driers.
3) Previous owner installed 'home-made' in line filters which was an emptied check valve with a 3 um T-Type filter element held in place with a spring. (Surprisingly, previous owner no longer works here.)
4) To try and push RT times down I increased column temp/pressure. They were within the "safe" bounds given by Agilent, but right at the edge.
My guess is that RT shifts are due to column degradation. What's surprising to me is that the RT shifts have accelerated dramitically since I took over operation of the GC. I've seen almost a 100% shift in the last year. As far as I can tell the shifts were much slower in the years before. Only thing I can guess is that increasing the column temp/pressure rapidly increased the column degredation.
Also about 7 months ago we sent the equipment in for repairs to the OBC, while there the inlet ass'y was replaced, and EPC valve and pressure sensor was replaced for the molsieve/plotu column, and the detector and flow ass'y die was replaced for the Al column. Could any of these faults have hidden RT shifts?
What other possible causes can you think of for the RT shifts?
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Second question has to do with replacing GC columns on a 3000 MicroGC. The column modules themselves are prohibitively expensive, roughly 5-7k each. At that price I am more likely to upgrade this GC to the Varian/Agilent MicroGC I have on my other reactor. According to Inficon, however, I should be able to replace the column itself without replacing the whole module, which should be substantially cheaper.
Anyone have any experience with this? How tough is it? I'm pretty mechanically oriented and have little difficulty working with 1/16" tubing and the like (I can tell the difference between Bucci and Swagelok 1/16" ferrels.)
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Final question. May be better suited for the Software subforum. The Agilent/Inficon MicroGC uses Cerity, which I hear quite a bit of whinging about. I can make it work for me, and to be perfectly honest, it is FAR superior to the Star software we are using on my Varian/Agilent MicroGC.
We're planning on replacing the Star software (its almost older than me) and I am trying to decide whether to go with EzChrom or Chemstation (or maybe Chromeleon.) What I want out of it, more than anything else, is the ability to work with different manufacturers GCs. It looks like EzChrom is the way to go with that in mind, but I'm still not sure exactly what Chemstation will support (keep hearing different things).
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Anyways, Thanks for reading my book. I hope to publish it one day.
