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- Posts: 6
- Joined: Sun Nov 14, 2010 6:46 pm
I am a graduate student at Purdue. I have been trying to evaluate the gas composition in a coal-gasification product sample. I am using an old GC-8A with a TCD. Helium is the carrier gas and I have installed a new Supelco MolSieve 5A for separating H2, N2, O2, CO and CH4 and a Supelco Chromasorb 102 for separating CO2 and higher mass hydro-carbons.
The two columns are separate since there are different injection ports. I use both columns separately to detect the H2, N2, O2, CO, CO2 and CH4 concentrations.
My questions are regarding the operation of this system and interpretation of the results.
Is it adequate to perform the sample analysis at an Injection port temperature of 150 deg. C and a column temperature of 120 deg. C? There is condensed water in my sample bag, but I extract the gas using a syringe and some water vapor will be present in the analysis sample.
Secondly, in which order will the gases be separated? A manual written by a previous student states that the order of separation is H2, O2, N2, CO, and CH4 for the MolSieve 5A column but some forums have stated differently. Would trace amounts of other gases such as H2S complicate the data?
Furthermore, according to the same manual, we are told that the first peak (preceding O2) is the concentration of H2. However, in my analysis, I am receiving 2 peaks preceding O2. Is this a known issue for measuring hydrogen with a helium-carrier gas? Furthermore, the concentration value for the supposed H2 peaks is an order of magnitude lower than what is told to contain in a calibration sample that I used.
Thank you
