First, it is hard to split water well. Not impossible, though.
I suggest a re-vamp.
I do oxygenates of gasoline in water. MEoH, EToH, N-butyl, 2-Heptanol, sec-Butyl and many other alcohols.
I use 6890 FID
I have great success with this setup:
Column: Restek Rxi-1ms, 30M, 0.32mmID, 4.0um film thickness. CAT#13396
Guard Column: Restek Polar-Deactivated Guard column 10M. CAT#10069
Inlet liner: 4mm Cyclosplitter from Restek too. CAT# 20706
Inlet: 220C Split 1:1
Oven:80C for 0.5min..then 15C/min to 120C...then 30C/min to 200C
FID TEMP: 340C
Set to "Constant Flow" with flow rate @ 2.5ml/min
Inject only 0.5ul
Detector flows: H2 25ml/min....AIR 250ml/min....Makeup (N2) 25ml/min no constant column makeup
Carrier gas: He (really important)
Use a Merlin for your septa if possible
Also, I use 1,4-dioxane as ISTD. I find 1-propanol a little unstable and prone to tailing
Key point, I don't have carryover problems and I am looking at ug/L levels of detection. And often times I will get samples that are at % levels.
If all this doesn't help you, try removing your septa purge lines and give them a good cleaning. Maybe replace the chemical trap.
The idea of slow injection is a good one, I'm gonna try that myself, today.
Hope this helps.
That method has some interesting details, it's always good to see alternative ways of tackling things.
For trace alcohols in water I would not expect a methyl silicone column to separate the smaller ones very well - is that why you use a thick film ? And I would expect the water to eat the phase pretty quickly - what kind of column lifetimes do you get ?
Most GCs struggle to maintain very low split ratios, and 1:1 ends up giving the worse of both split and splitless injections. Have you tried higher split ratios, or real splitless ? How do they look ?
The programme rates are very high for the length of column - presumably you have resolution to spare towrds the end of the chromatogram ?
Why is it imprtant to use helium as carrier gas - and compared to which other gasses ?
Thanks
Peter