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- Posts: 24
- Joined: Thu Jun 06, 2013 8:05 am
I apologise if this topic was previously discussed here (I couldn't find anything relevant however).
I want to construct calibration curves. Let's say that the analysis concerns the SPME of volatiles in wine and I am building the calibration curves for some of the detected volatiles only as I couldn't identify all of the VOCs present in the sample.
In many papers researchers studying VOCs in wine (or beer) use water as a matrix to built the calibration curves. Why not wine? There are competitive adsorption and absorption interactions between the analytes on SPME fiber. There are more VOCs present in wine than in water model. Therefore these interactions might differ between the two matrix types. Could I use wine spiked with different levels of standards to built calibration curves? Then I'd subtract the peak areas of the analytes from the wine blank from the peak areas of the analytes from the spiked wine samples to build the calibration curves.
Or is water just simply agreed as a "standard matrix" for water-based samples as it surely makes the analysis easier? I suppose if back-calculated accuracy and precision from wine samples are demonstrated to be in the acceptable range, then it's fine to use water for construction of calibration curves.
Will be very grateful for any comments. Thank you.
Kamila
