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- Posts: 7
- Joined: Wed Nov 01, 2006 11:14 pm
Can someone help me to better understand why I get a linear calibration curve with a TCD versus an FID? I am trying to get a calibration curve over the entire composition range for a 2 solvent mixture (one polar solvent, one nonpolar solvent) and am using both FID and TCD (two different instruments). For TCD, I do the separation on a DB-1 column, Tinj=200C, Toven=30C ramp to 200C, Tdet=250C. For FID, I am using an HP-5 column, but am using the same operating conditions. I am operating in split-mode, and the split ratios are similar. I inject 0.2 microL manually for all injections.
Why is the calibration curve using the response of the TCD linear (over the entire composition range) and the FID response is non-linear? For the TCD, both area% vs weight fraction, and area vs. weight fraction are linear. For FID, the area% vs. weight fraction polar solvent is non-linear (parabolic, concave upward; area% vs. weight fraction nonpolar solvent is concave downward). For FID the area vs. weight fraction also appears non-linear, but because of higher variability in injection volume, it is not that obvious.
I think it may be related to the changing volume due to volume expansion/contraction of the solvent mixture. Why/how could this affect the FID and/or TCD response and the calibration curve.
Many thanks for your help,
Christina
