by
jonjon » Thu Dec 15, 2016 12:29 am
Peter,
Thanks for your insight. The TFS has been a solute like I havent encountered before in its apparent behavior. Its MW maybe close to heptane, but its BP is -65C. All lines and valves are heated (90C nominally) on the valve manifold and line running into the GC/MS is plumbed into the injection port (SR 10:1), this column is attached to injection port (225C). The starting temperature of -40C is primarily for a permanent gas channel (with a PPQC) column. The oven ramp is -40C for 5, ramp at 5 to 10C, hold, ramp at 20C to 150 hold, ramp at 20C to 200, hold.
I wasnt expecting TFS to behave like it is either. But the few bits of information that I have gathered and learned suggest otherwise. I havent been able to find much in the literature on trace TFS separations. I found one by Bruno, Capezzuto, Crammarossa, dealing with SF6 with TFS and an impurity and they mentioned the non linear behavior at low concentrations and the need to "passivate" the system with 100% TFS, but this was using a PPQS packed. I actually tried a micropack PPQS for this application. It worked ok at higher temperature (~0C, I saw peak, but tailing some), but was a struggle to a adequate separation at -40C, due to the need of the other perman gas column, to many compromises. We had some collaborates who had a similar setup (using a PDMS column), and they also mentioned the need to "passivate", but they were using a 2% standard TFS.
When I installed the new "inert" column, this was the first time I was able to sharp peak to elute at -40C. The odd thing is regardless of the starting temperature (-40C, 0C, 50C,...) TFS still elutes very near the dead volume, or staying differently, compared the to other impurities the oven starting temperature seems to have minimal effect on retention for TFS.
So I am wondering if injecting a silylating agent would help or maybe more importantly will not hurt. Thinking isothermal at 175C then ramp up to burn anything else off?
Thanks everyone.
Jon