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- Posts: 12
- Joined: Thu Oct 07, 2010 6:30 pm
I am having a problem whereby the active peak in a calcitriol standard has decreased in area to undetectable levels, using a 717 plus autosampler. Strangely, there is a solvent peak present in all injections, indicating that something is being injected. The system is under normal phase conditions. The standard is prepared in 100% miglyol (trigylceride oil) and the mobile phase is made with heptane, THF, n-propanol and ethylene dichloride.
NOW, when I switch over to reverse phase and run our in-house calibration standard (70% MeOH as MP and as diluent for standards), the areas are as expected and RSD is < 0.5%.
I had the analyst move to another LC with a similar configuration to the system under which the original problem occurred and the peak areas are just as expected. And this is using the same solutions, MP and column.
Could it be that the original LC system simply doesn't "like" the conditions? Or is it possibly a viscosity issue between the matrix in which the standard is prepared and the mobile phase? Or could the active be adsorbing to something inside the 717, or possibly there is some plumbing difference between the 2 systems?
Any insight would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Chris Taylor
CT
