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- Posts: 128
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What is the typical carrier gas is set up for GC in your lab?
Helium ,,nitrogen and Hydrogen? all 3 ? or 2 ?or 1?
Pros n cons with this?
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Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.
Don't hold your breath waiting for "official methods" to include hydrogen carrier. I'd suggest you document equivalent results both ways, run supporting precision and accuracy as agreed upon with your QA folks.We are trying to go with hydrogen unless the ASTM method requires helium.
way ahead of youDon't hold your breath waiting for "official methods" to include hydrogen carrier. I'd suggest you document equivalent results both ways, run supporting precision and accuracy as agreed upon with your QA folks.We are trying to go with hydrogen unless the ASTM method requires helium.
There was a discussion about the pros and cons of both gas sources here.What is the general consensus on hydrogen supplied from a gas generator vs cylinders?
Never mind the inlet, it cannot be good for the column either !. Do you have any more information on this please ?, I rarely use dichloromethane, but I do need my columns to be in tip top condition.The 5890 I considered going with hydrogen but I inject a lot of chlorinated solvents and worry about HCl gas generation and it would be a pain to plumb the septa purge and split vents to the hood exhaust.
Chlorinated solvents + hydrogen + heat = HCl + potential inlet damage
One lab I know of destroyed an Agilent (6890) inlet trying out hydrogen as a carrier gas with DCM as an injection solvent. Your inlet conditions may vary, but proceed with caution.
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