L. 9-Gas Chromatography
L. 9-Gas Chromatography
L. 9-Gas Chromatography
Gas Chromatography
FST-401
DR. IMRAN PASHA
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF FOOD SCIENCE &
TECHNOLOGY,
UAF
Gas Chromatography (GC) 2
GC separates solutes based on their different interactions with the mobile and stationary
phases
Solute’s retention is determined mostly by its vapor pressure and volatility
Increased chance that solid or liquid stationary phase interacts with solute
Main purpose of the gas in GC is to move the solutes along the column, mobile phase is
often referred to as carrier gas (include He, Ar, H2, N2)
7
1) Gas-solid chromatography (GSC)
Same material is used as both the stationary phase and support material
Common adsorbents include:
Alumina, molecular sieves (crystalline aluminosilicates [zeolites] and clay), silica
and active carbon
Advantages Disadvantage
Very strong retention of low
Long column lifetimes
b. Methyl(phenyl)polysiloxane H H n
c. Polyethylene glycol (Carbowax 20M)
CH3 C6H5
d. Trifluoropropylpolysiloxane
e. Cyanopropylpolysiloxane O Si O Si
Advantages CH3
n
C6H5
m
a. More stable than coated liquid phases
b. Can be placed on support with thinner and more uniform thickness than liquid phases
Support Material
There are two main types of supports used in GC: 10
TCD
Linear and dynamic range better than TC
Disadvantage
Destructive detector
2) Thermal Conductivity Detector (TCD) 13
Katherometer or hot-wire detector
First universal detector developed for GC
Process
Measures a bulk property of the mobile phase leaving the column
Measures ability to conduct heat away from a hot-wire (i.e., thermal conductivity)
Thermal conductivity changes with presence of other components in the mobile phase
Advantages
Truly universal detector
Non-destructive
Disadvantage
Detect mobile phase impurities
Limit of detection
-7
~ 10 M
Process
Same basic principal as FID Alkali Bead
create a current
Contains a small amount of alkali
Limit of detection: NPD is 500x better than FID in detecting nitrogen- and phosphorus-
containing compounds
NPD more sensitive to other heterocompounds, such as sulfur-, halogen-, and arsenic-
containing molecules
Disadvantage
Destructive detector
Process
Based on the capture of electrons by
Electronegative atoms in a molecule
Electrons are produced by ionization of the carrier gas with a radioactive source (3H or
63Ni)
Advantages
Useful for environmental testing
Detection of chlorinated pesticides or herbicides
Detection of polynuclear aromatic carcinogens
Detection of organometallic compounds
Selective for halogen- (I, Br, Cl, F), nitro-, and sulfur-containing
compounds
Detects polynuclear aromatic compounds, anhydrides and
conjugated carbonyl compounds
5) Flame Photometric Detector
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry