by
lmh » Mon Nov 28, 2016 9:47 am
You're not going to want to hear this (or your boss isn't, anyway) but if those peaks are bigger than your disregard limit, then your method isn't adequate for purpose.
I'm completely unconvinced that peaks that size, on a base-line that wobbly, will be reliably detectable by the integrator; they're the sort of size where tiny variations in integrator settings will affect whether they're found or not, and how big they are, and the same chromatogram integrated by the algorithm of another manufacturer would give a different answer.
The disregard limit implies that any peak bigger than the limit is important enough that it must be detected and reported. If the method/equipment can't reliably see peaks at the disregard limit, then the limit is pointless (what I really mean is that the disregard limit must be at least as good as the LOD, and those peaks, I think, are unlikely to be as large as your LOD).
Given that the peaks are after the end of the gradient it's unlikely they're relevant, but unfortunately you can't ignore data you've collected. A less fastidious person might have turned their detector off at the end of the rising part of the gradient!
As a matter of interest, I have very occasionally encountered genuine peaks that don't come off during the gradient but come out later. It can happen where an analyte is very bi-functional, and can stick to the column by two different mechanisms (e.g. some sort of hilic or silanol interaction at high organic and reverse-phase hydrophobic interactions at low organic). This can give it a U-shaped curve of binding-versus-%B, meaning that it moves only during the middle stage of a gradient. During the gradient it moves onto the column - as the gradient goes back again, it moves a bit more (and maybe comes off), and during the next run it carries on again and probably comes off!