-
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Thu Feb 03, 2011 4:22 pm
Any comments would be appreciated.
Regards
Melissa
Advertisement
Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.
Not if you actually take the trouble to measure it: APPS, P.J. and ARCHER, M. 2010. Evaluation of the source of bias caused by losses of solvent vapour during sample preparation. Journal of Accreditation and Quality Control 15: 171–180.Hi Melissa,
D... I wouldn't recommend using gas-tight syringe for your spiking recovery study, though...as the reproducibility is LOW
Good luck!
Hi Melissa
I am calculating recovery by comparing the peak response of the spike to that of a standard spiked at the 100% level.
If it was a system issue, what should I be looking at ?
Regards
Melissa
As Peter mentioned it could just be the linearity of the system. For the 150% to calculate correctly using the 100% as the standard, then the response curve would have to be exactly 1:1 concentration versus response from the origin, through the 100% point up to the 150% level. If you make a calibration using 3 points say, 50%, 100% and 150% or maybe 200%, then the 150% check should calculate correctly. Single point calibrations usually only work well for concentrations within +/-20% of the known point at maximum. A linear calibration using 3 or more points is usually much better and should at least slightly exceed the values you are expecting from samples on both the high and low extremes(i.e. being lower than the lowest expected and higher than the higher expected values).Thanks for all the comments.
I will consider using a 25µL syringe for all spikes. For other analytes/methods, I have had no issues with using a 10µL gas-tight syringe in this way (Hamilton, SGE, etc), even for the 150% level. I have even tested for hexane in DMSO, but looking back, the recoveries were closer to 90-94% where I am hoping for 100ish %. (My accepted range is 85 - 115 %, but I usually get 97 - 105 % in other methdos. Anything wider and I start to suspect matrix effects. But the repeatability AND recovery is a problem here, but mainly only for hexane.)
I have started trying using DMI for the stock standard and find that hexane is much more miscible than in DMSO. So far, the recovery is still a bit shaky for this analyte. Meanwhile, methanol and IPA recovery/repeatbility is pretty good, so I wonder if this may not be a system problem.
I am calculating recovery by comparing the peak response of the spike to that of a standard spiked at the 100% level. I know that the presence of sample material could have an effect, but this is also happening with pure standards.
If it was a system issue, what should I be looking at ?
Regards
Melissa
Separation Science offers free learning from the experts covering methods, applications, webinars, eSeminars, videos, tutorials for users of liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, sample preparation and related analytical techniques.
Subscribe to our eNewsletter with daily, weekly or monthly updates: Food & Beverage, Environmental, (Bio)Pharmaceutical, Bioclinical, Liquid Chromatography, Gas Chromatography and Mass Spectrometry.