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quantifying analytes

Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 3:54 pm
by offroad
Dear friends,

please, could you shed some light on this?

If on a chromatogram I have 3 peaks, A, B and C, and their area, x, y and z.

Would it be right and precise to say that the composition of the compounds is taken from the areas only?

Let x = 10, y = 20, z = 30

Composition of A = 10/(10+20+30) [percent] and so on?

Thank you

Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 4:05 pm
by Kostas Petritis
Most likely not as the detector response for each of the analytes is probably different (and most times is). If the response of your analytes is the same or if you are using detectors with "equimass" or "equimolar" response you might be able to make "similar" claims.

Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 4:15 pm
by grzesiek
preparing calibration curves using standards (again :) ) will let you quantify your components, it will also answer the question/doubt raised by kostas - whether response if different or not

marciobarbalho these are some basic questions you ask, and there is this student projects section for this :)

I still hope we helped

Posted: Fri Oct 30, 2009 5:30 pm
by offroad
preparing calibration curves using standards (again :) ) will let you quantify your components, it will also answer the question/doubt raised by kostas - whether response if different or not

marciobarbalho these are some basic questions you ask, and there is this student projects section for this :)

I still hope we helped
Yes, basic question, I am preparing the standards, that was just a doubt, it seems the answer is 'no'.

Posted: Sat Oct 31, 2009 8:27 am
by grzesiek
yes, the simple answer is: "usually no"