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Will too much high vacuum grease will give high water peak?
Discussions about GC and other "gas phase" separation techniques.
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When I do the autotune in GC-MS, there is too much water ( a big peak at 18, almost 100%). But the vacuum is pretty low (57). The only thing I can think is I put more high vacuum grease than before. Will this be the reason why the result of autotune is abnormal? By the way, there are whole bunch of peaks before 69, I checked for the leaks elsewhere, I can not find it. Any suggestion will be helpful.
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I do not have an answer to your question, but I do have a few comments on how to troubleshoot and fix your situation. First, cool and vent your MS. Then try cleaning the excess grease using a non-polar solvent such as hexane. Then 'cap-off' the MS from the GC using a blank ferrule. Pump down and heat the MS. Let the system stabilize for at least four hours, then scan m/z 10-100. What do you see? Hopefully this will allow the contamination to be pulled out of the MS.
What exactly did you put grease on?
What exactly did you put grease on?
Answer Man
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I am assuming that they put vacuum grease on the o-ring that connects the source to the manifold. I too use Apiezon-L grease on my o-ring, but very lightly. I also have a slight water peak <10% of m/z 69. I have always thought the leak was from where the diffusion pump connects to the manifold. I have sprayed a light gas around all fittings and have found no leaks. The light gas would not show up on a scan if it was beyond the manifold.
In response to wiping the o-ring with hexane, I would not do this. It could damage the o-ring and who would want hexane contamination bleeding from the o-ring into your mass spec? We all need to be careful in giving advice when we do not know the instrument , the o-ring material, and how it would affect the person's application.
In response to wiping the o-ring with hexane, I would not do this. It could damage the o-ring and who would want hexane contamination bleeding from the o-ring into your mass spec? We all need to be careful in giving advice when we do not know the instrument , the o-ring material, and how it would affect the person's application.
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