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- Posts: 12
- Joined: Sat Aug 04, 2012 6:27 pm
I have a Thermo ISQ GC/MS with a Trace GC 1300 GC, a Restek MXT-5 (ie DB-5 HT) 30m 0.25 mm ID 0.25 µm film thickness column and use Agilent 4mm ID tap GW (part nr 5062-3587) liners and He as a carrier gas, and use liquid injection (hexane solvent, injection volume 1 2 µl). I am on the lookout for a good method file to separate a C7 to C40 alkane ladder, resulting in sharp, approx equally spaced peaks, no peak tailing and with also the longer chain alkanes coming out nicely. [Ideally I would like to get compounds out in the range of C7 to C45, but my alkane ladder only goes up to C40]
The method and settings I am using now (thermo Trace GC 1300 methods file available from here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/mohx1685d4gb2 ... .meth?dl=1) are pasted below, but as one can see in the chromatogram my alkanes with chain lengths above C35 show peak tailing :

Anybody any thoughts how I could improve resolution for these long-chain compounds, and get rid of the peak tailing there? Any obvious improvements I could make to my method?
Current settings for my method are:
- Restek MXT-5 (ie DB-5 HT) 30m 0.25 mm ID 0.25 µm film thickness column
- Agilent 4mm ID tap GW liner
- liquid spitless injection with surge (without surge the longer-chain alkanes dropped off too much)
- 1 µl injection volume
- constant flow, 0.9 ml/min
- 350 °C inlet temp
split flow 80 ml/min
splitless time 0.8 min
- surge pressure 170 kPa
surge duration 0.8 min
- purge flow 5 ml/min
constant septum purge
- carrier options
vacuum compensation on
carrier gas saver on
gas saver flow 20 ml/min
gas saver time 2 min
- oven programme
40 °C for 2 min,
40 to 120°C at 20°C/min
120 to 200°C at 10°C/min
200 to 250°C at 7°C/min
250 to 350°C at 5°C/min, 4 min hold at 350 °C
- MS transfer line temp 350 °C, ion source temp 300 °C
- injection settings:
35 mm injection depth, 20 mm/s penetration speed, 50 µL/s injection speed
fast injection unchecked
Any thoughts what could cause this peak tailing for the long-chain compounds? Or could that be more of a liner issue?
cheers,
Tom
