by
lmb » Thu May 21, 2009 8:55 pm
I know that He and H2 can be used in GC-MS for their lower "viscosity" and hence have a better resolution
Dear Anthony_Ng,
The following info might be useful.
1. Viscosity of He is not lower, but slightly higher than viscosity of N2. In relation to viscosities of He, viscosities of (H2, N2) are (0.45, 0.9). In other words, of the three gases, (He, H2 N2), He has the highest viscosity. Viscosity of H2 is 45% of viscosity of He, and viscosity of N2 is 90% of viscosity of He.
2. Carrier gas has no effect on resolution. Take any capillary column analysis with N2 as a carrier gas. Replace N2 with He or H2 and translate the method parameters using Agilent’s GC Method Translation Software (available free of charge at
http://www.chem.agilent.com/cag/main.html#mxlator). Resolution of ANY peak pair will be almost identical in all three cases.
3. Analysis time is a different story. H2 is the fastest carrier gas and N2 is the slowest. The difference in the analysis times depends on the degree of the gas decompression along the column.
3a. In GC/MS (vacuum at the column outlet) and in all other cases where inlet pressure is much larger that outlet pressure (long, small-bore columns with outlet pressure at or below 1 atmosphere) analysis times of (H2, He, N2) relate approximately as (1, 1.7, 2.9). Thus (while providing exactly the same resolution in all three cases), the times of analyses with He and N2 would be 70% and 190% longer than the analysis time with H2.
3b. When gas decompression along a column is small (short, wide-bore columns with outlet pressure at or above 1 atmosphere), the analysis times of (H2, He, N2) relate approximately as (1, 1.25, 4.2), i.e., (while providing exactly the same resolution in all three cases), the times of analyses with He and N2 would be 25% and 320% longer than the analysis time with H2.
Hope that you find this helpful.
lmb