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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Mon Oct 18, 2010 5:29 pm
We had a visiting scientist who prepared samples long before my GC was ready to receive them. She had extracted plant jasmonic acid and salicylic acid using published derivatization techniques, and diluted the the extract in hexanes before sealing the plastic microcentrifuge tubes and freezing. Before the GC went down, I managed to run one test sample, which I further diluted in hexanes to 1:20, and got a nice chromatogram. Now months later with the GC fixed, she has left and most of the hexanes have evaporated in the freezer (some vials appear completely evaporated).
I tried to redissolve the analyte in the empty tubes by adding the exact amount of hexanes (so I don't alter the original concentration too much). Some of the dried tubes, when redissolved, have what appears to be a little gelatinous bead that doesn't dissolve at the tube bottom, despite vortexing or waiting a while. I then made a 1:20 dilution to put on the GC as usual. Regardless if the sample had a little bead or not, peaks are not showing up. Small peaks appear when I make a 1:10 dilution.
Has anyone experienced something similar? I thought only the hexanes were evaporating, but could certain analytes also escape a sealed tube, along with the hexanes? Perhaps the compounds have broken down over time? The visiting scientist is long gone, but is awaiting the data. Since I cannot reproduce her experiment, I am trying to salvage what is left in the tubes.
Thanks,
Alice
Stable Isotope Facility
Department of Forest Sciences
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada