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- Posts: 418
- Joined: Mon Aug 15, 2005 3:06 pm
If you can, take a compound - any compound - whose purity is both well known (and high) and separate it under the conditions you're using, then process as you normally would and see if you come up with a similar error. Anything that you would consider using as an internal standard might be a good candidate.
If you have a compound that is known to be 99.99% pure, for instance, you have good signal to noise, you're not saturating your detector, your blank and gradient aren't causing any spurious peaks in the neighborhood of the peak of interest, and you're still seeing peak purity issues, you might want to investigate your data processing settings. I don't know Chemstation (I'm a Waters guy), but if there is a place in the processing method in which you have to specify an area of "quiet" baseline to subtract (as you do for Millennium / Empower: called the noise interval time) and you have that set in a place where there are peaks or dips, then you'll drive yourself insane looking for pure peaks and you'll never find any.
Much luck!
