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Broken capillary column

Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.

11 posts Page 1 of 1
Never had this happen in 25 years of fused-silica capillary column experience: a 30m x 0.25mm Agilent HP-5MS capillary column column installed in my GCMS spontaneously broke about in the middle after 5 months of use. The oven door had never even been opened during that time period, so it wasn't due to an operator "hand slip" or anything. Anybody else ever experience anything like this?

FYI, there was enough column so both my inlet pressure (6890) and MS tunes were still OK (my symptom was obviously no peaks at all, just air).
This has happened to me 2 or 3 times in about 20 years and I assumed (with no concrete evidence) that the column had a flaw or had been damaged somehow. Stuff happens :?
Same as you, column broke about 9m from the detector. Luckily, the column was a 100m and just connected again with little loss of retention times.
Never happened to me before, but happened to two of my labmates in the past six months!

suresh

Hi All,
Did anyone have a column break when using an FID?
Did/would the hydrogen flow to the oven?
WK

Hi All,
Did anyone have a column break when using an FID?
Did/would the hydrogen flow to the oven?
WK
Not enough H2 going to the FID to be of much concern, if your gasses are anywhere close to correct. H2 becomes more of a safety concern when you use it as the carrier gas, so having a column break under such circumstances could lead to a problem. That's the original reason (I have been told) for magnetic oven door catches, so that an oven could blow "safely".
Thanks,
DR
Image
FYI, there was enough column so both my inlet pressure (6890) and MS tunes were still OK (my symptom was obviously no peaks at all, just air).
How can your tunes be OK, with about 100% air ???
Be carefull with these tunes, because I do think that the machine is tuned incorrectly.

Okkie
The good thing about a bowling future is that it starts with your next game, and comes only one game at a time

I meant that my tunes were OK in terms of peak width, percent, etc., and I didn't notice the air peaks in the Tune Report because I wrongly assumed that since there was no error window on the monitor, that the Tune was OK. It was when I injected a sample that only air background was evident to me, so that's when I opened up the oven and found the broken capillary. Even I'm allowed to make a mistake sometimes !!!

Did you try to fix the column with a press-fit connector? If so, do you find these things work well?

Agilent sent me some, and some resin, free, but I haven't tried it yet (I installed a new back-up column).

Did you try to fix the column with a press-fit connector? If so, do you find these things work well?
We reconnected broken column with press fit connector,and works well.
You need to properly cut the column to make a leak free connection,especially for ms,where you see very small leak at the press fit connections.

Bye
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