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'asymmetric' peak responses

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

3 posts Page 1 of 1
Hi,

I am running VFAs on an old Varian 3400 instrument, which was brought out of retirement a couple of years ago.

It seemed to work fine at first, but I am increasingly seeing an asymmetric effect on peak response, i.e. when the response is greater (than normal) for early eluting peaks, later eluting peak response is depressed, and vice versa. My internal standard is the last peak out, so correcting for IS response works fine for the last few peaks, but is disastrous for early peaks. Injections are generally pretty reproducible, but every now and then this effect shows up.

Method details:
• VFAs in aqueous solution on Stabilwax-DA 30m/0.25mm/0.25um column + 10m guard column
• Hydrogen carrier at 16 psi, split ratio 1:40
• Injector 220C Detector(FID) 260C Oven 110 – 185C @ 15C/min
• 1 ul injection

I'm by no means a GC expert, and so far I have tried only things that are relatively easy to do:
• Replacing septum/liner
• +/- injector temp
• +/- column/split flow
• +/- initial column temp
• Trimming column / adjusting column insertion depth / replacing column
without any noticeable improvement (in fact my experimentation generally makes things worse!)

I ran this analysis about a year ago and the effect was present then but not bad enough to spend time trying to fix it.

Now the effect is more pronounced, and chromatography is not as good, with significantly broader peaks. Peaks are narrower and more well-formed with increasing retention time. First eluting peak (acetate) is broad and tails. Sensitivity also seems less for early peaks (areas less than expected).

In between times I had an amino acid column on there and the effect was similar although not as pronounced, but I ended up having to use 2 internal standards (early and late eluting) to cater for the asymmetric effect. Interestingly, at first I had problems seeing any response at all for late eluting AAs until I dropped the injector temp from 250 to 225, whereupon they popped up. Fiddling with injector temp doesn't seem to help my current problem though.

Any thoughts as to what might be going on gratefully accepted!

Rick
Hello

I'd recommend:
1.Check inlet for leaks (septum line, split vent line)
2.Check glass wool in liner - possible discrimination because of glass wool position. Try to use tappered lined
3.Remove guard column (I assume it is glass silica column), cut 10-20 cmm of your analytical column and install new guard column

It looks like you have some active sites in system (causing tailing) so make sure your inlet is clean, liner is new/deactivated and column is trimmed a bit.

Regards

Tomasz Kubowicz
Hi, many thanks for your suggestions. I think I'm ok on 2 & 3 as I already changed the liner (twice), and I also happened to have a spare column+guard column, which made little difference when swapped in. Number 1 is a bit worrying as I haven't done any leak checking beyond the column fittings. When you say septum line, do you mean the septum purge line? I'm also pretty sure the inlet itself has never been cleaned, is there a recommended procedure for this (I have no manual for the injector)
Thanks,

Rick
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