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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Fri Apr 09, 2021 6:18 pm
I'm facing a mysterious fact.
Trying to quantify amphetamine with two different cromatographs, a Thermo 1300 and an Agilent 6890, with FID detector. Apparently, the analyte is soluble in my solvent (a 50-50% mixture of ethanol and methanol, and then 10 min of ultrasonication).
When I inject the calibration points on both chromatographs, it seems I have two different responses (same acquisition method, or that's what I think) :
for Thermo I could have an acceptable linear response (r and r2=0,99..) but the quadratic curve fits PERFECTLY.
However, for the Agilent, the linear fitting is already pretty cool, r and r2 are 0,9999...
Is that even possible? It is the same preparation.
The acquisition characteristics are the same except for the detector flows, bcs Thermo recommends another flows, but I don't think this is the source of the problem since other analytes don't show these differences.
I am pretty disappointed since I thought it had an acceptable lineality with a linear curve since I have realised that it was not perfect because its more quadratic than lineal.
I would like to avoid a quadratic fitting... Could it be due to a poor solubility of the analyte in my solvent? Do you think that changing the solvent (100% methanol could work better but I was avoiding it due to its toxicity) would improve the linear response?
(But still with the mistery that in the Agilent is lineal...)
Let's see if some of you has any idea
L
