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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Feb 12, 2010 11:13 pm
I was wondering how precise electronically controlled split ratios usually are (I'm using an HP 7890) and whether it's appropriate to assume the split ratio is quantitatively that dilution of your sample?
On a more specific level - I have some biological extractions that I'm analyzing for derivatized fatty acid methyl esters, with these esters present at a very wide range of concentrations. I had been running all my samples and external standards at a 1:10 split ratio while turning off the detector for the abundant species, and making a 20X dilution of each sample into a new vial and also running that at a 1:10 split ratio to quantify just the abundant species. I decided to try running a 1:10 split and a 1:100 split on the same sample instead, which works great and saves on excessive use of vials - however I need to know whether the standards must be run at the same split ratio for accurate quantitation (so run each of six standards TWICE at 1:10 and 1:100), or whether I can run them just at the 1:10 split and assume the split ratio itself is accurate enough to quantify everything on that basis.
Should mention that the manual dilutions aren't terribly accurate either since the solvent is hexane, but I think the internal standards to which everything is normalized help account for evaporative concentration increases.
Thanks for any suggestions!
