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- Posts: 656
- Joined: Tue Jul 05, 2005 7:45 am
I have been asked to develop a better method for benzalkonium chloride in our company, and for the chromatography part there is no problem (Primesep).
However, when I inject from the same vial, the area for the C14-homolog decreases for every injection (about 1% per injection). I don't see the same decrease for the C12-homolog. I doubt that this is adsorption to the vial - why would only one homolog be affected? And the areas only decrease after the first injection (i.e. a untouched vial can stand for days in the autosampler). Could BAC form micelles?
The sample is dissolved in water/citrate buffer. Any good ideas of how to solve this?
