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- Posts: 535
- Joined: Fri Jun 02, 2017 11:10 pm
There was supposed to be no PERC. I found 14.2 ppb. Furthermore I ran it in duplicate and spiked in duplicate and got M = 14.21, MD = 12.98, MS = 53.29, and MSD = 53.89 ppb for a 40 ppb spike. My initial CC had 40.3 ppb (AvgRF 2.82 CCRF 2.85, for 40 ppb spike) and the immediately following blank was 0.40 ppb (less than my MDL of 1 ppb). My cal curve is a response factor curve with 20, 40, 80, 120, 160, 240, 320, 400, and 480 ppb. The RSD for the calibration is 4.52%.
Now my MS was a little high in recovery, so I let the MSD finish, ran a blank and then another unspiked matrix and another MS from the second VOA. The notes said the sample had to be run immediately so using the second VOA (which had been cooled to 4C in the sample fridge) was perhaps not best. But I thought it was better than reprepping the sample a second time. The M2 was slightly low on some analytes but the MS was right on the money.
I do not normally have a problem with PERC showing up in samples, nor with carryover of PERC from the CC or MS/MSD.
So, I am puzzled how I can find this in the sample, have good instrument and batch QC, and then be told it is not in the sample.
The only thing I can think of is that PERC might be a degradation product of something else in the sample?
