by
JTM » Mon Sep 13, 2010 7:30 pm
I am developing a quantitative method for ethylene glycol, diethylene glycol and triethylene glycol in serum. The sample preparation step is by adding methanol to precipitate serum protein. The supernatant is derivatized with BSTFA with TMS. Standard curve uses same serum as matrix. However, the precision and accuracy data of spiked QC (low, medium, high levels) were poor. Accuracy can be up to 150% in 1 replicate sample. This happens from time to time.
The tuning report is ok.
1. The temp. gradient is 40 deg C per min in part of the experiment. Can this high rate of change cause the imprecision and inaccuracy at some occasion?
2. The column changed to purple color. Will a deteriorated column affect the precision and accuracy?
3. The liner gets dirty quickly. Will a dirty liner causes imprecision and inaccuracy?
I am very puzzled. I appreciate if anyone can give me a clue. Thanks.
1. Don't exceed your GC's maximum temp ramp speed, otherwise it'll do what it can and be uneven, like you said. Not sure if that'll cause much difference in the signal though.
2. The ENTIRE column turned purple? Huh? If it's just the front 2-3 inches, then trim it, yes.
3. You need to change that liner if you can ever see discoloration or particulate in it...