by
lmh » Thu Jul 21, 2016 11:13 am
Normally you wouldn't subtract a blank. Your blank run shouldn't have a peak in the same place as the analyte in a sample run. If it does, you have a serious problem; many peaks in blank runs gradually change in area, so at the very least you'd have to establish that the variability in the peak in blank runs was very low compared to the expected size and variation in your analyte peak. It's a very high-risk strategy.
Subtracting a blank run from other runs is also somewhat risky. If you have any variation in retention-time or peak-shape, then subtraction will generate spurious negative and positive peaks. If you subtract a Gaussian peak from another equally-sized peak that's shifted slightly to the right, you'll get a sharp negative peak, followed by a flat bit, and then a sharp positive peak. Of course if the blank sample has a smaller peak, there will still be a proper peak to see in the subtracted chromatogram, but it will be preceded by a negative spike that will fool most integrators into starting the baseline far too low (over-estimates peak area), and there will be funny tailing effects.
Good luck!