by
polster » Mon Oct 30, 2006 10:08 pm
My samples were largely composed of hydrogen and helium, with low concentrations of oxygen (~50 ppm), carbon monoxide (~100 ppm), carbon dioxide (~10-20 ppm), and of course water. I am also able to get satisfactory data for water concentrations of around 200 ppm, but I am more concerned with concentrations of a few ppm and lower. My sample baselines have no water in them (with the exception of what little amount may sneak through various filters I have), and the chromatogram exhibits a slight negative peak. As water concentration climbs, I notice a peak forming, eventually dwarfing the original negative response. The negative peak is very small, but nonetheless present.
This is an example of what I see with "zero" water.
Here is what it looks like with very low amounts of water. This is ~6 ppm by my analysis.
The samples are analyzed using an Agilent MicroGC, using a plot Q column, helium carrier at 120 C and 20 psi. Elution time is roughly 2.2 minutes. If you need any more information, let me know. Otherwise, any insight into the issue would be helpful.
Thanks.