by
AICMM » Mon Nov 08, 2010 2:12 pm
Randy,
I have done this with limited compounds but no standard. As an example, I did this for propylene when I had a standard for propane. The good news is that you can simply insert the compound in the calibration table, name it, assign an amount and assign an area. Viola you are calibrated. There is a multitude of bad news with this approach. First, what is the basis for the area that you punch in? In my case I can use the carbon counting capability of the FID and be reasonably close. Second, in your case, it sounds like you would have to figure out what compound will respond at something close to the same level. Third, and most important, what you really have is an educated guess which you should disclose to your data end-user. In my case that is good enough for the customer (they don't expect to see propylene very often) but it may not be the same for your end user.
Best regards,
AICMM