Chapter 27 Gas Chromatography
Chapter 27 Gas Chromatography
CHROMATOGRAPHY
Mobile phase is a gas!
Stationary phase could be
anything but a gas
Carrier gas:
Column:
Oven:
Detectors:
He (common), N2, H2
Pinlet 10-50 psig
Flow = 25-150 mL/min packed column
Flow = 1-25 mL/min open tubular column
2-100 m coiled stainless steel/glass/Teflon/fused silica, packed vs. unpacked
0-400 C ~ average boiling point of sample
Accurate to <1 C
FID, TCD, ECD, NPD, FPD, AED, PID, MSD. (SINGLE OR TANDEM)
Mobile Phase
GC separates solutes based on their different interactions between mobile and stationary
phases.
solutes retention is determined mostly by its vapor pressure and volatility
solutes retention is controlled by its interaction with the stationary phase
Carrier gas main purpose of the gas in GC is to move the solutes along the column, mobile
phase is often referred to as carrier gas (MUST BE INERT!).
Common carrier gas: include He, Ar, H2, N2
Carrier Gas or Mobile phase does not affect solute retention, but does affect:
1.) Desired efficiency for the GC System (Van Deemter!)
- low molecular weight gases (He, H2) larger diffusion coefficients
- low molecular weight gases faster, more efficient separations
Mobile Phases
Stationary phase in GC is the main factor determining the selectivity and retention
of solutes.
There are three types of stationary phases used in GC:
Solid adsorbents
Liquids coated on solid supports
Bonded-phase supports
Gas-Solid Chromatography
Advantages:
- long column lifetimes
- ability to retain and separate some compounds not easily resolved by other
GC methods
geometrical isomers
permanent gases
Disadvantages:
- very strong retention of low volatility or polar solutes
- catalytic changes that can occur on GSC supports
- GSC supports have a range of chemical and physical environments
different strength retention sites
non-symmetrical peaks
variable retention times
Gas-Liquid Chromatography
2.) Gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) LIKE DISSOLVES LIKE!
- stationary phase is a liquid coated on a solid support
- over 400 liquid stationary phases available for GLC
- material range from polymers (polysiloxanes, polyesters, polyethylene glycols) to
fluorocarbons, and liquid crystals etc.
Based on polarity, of the 400 phases available only 6-12 are needed for most separations.
The routinely recommended phases are listed below:
Gas-Liquid Chromatography
Preparing a stationary phase for GLC:
- slurry of the desired liquid phase and solvent is made with a solid support
solid support is usually diatomaceous earth (fossilized shells of ancient
aquatic algae (diatoms), silica-based material)
- solvent is evaporated off, coating the liquid stationary phase on the support
- the resulting material is then packed into the column
Disadvantages:
- liquid may slowly bleed off with time
especially if high temperatures are used
contribute to background
change characteristics of the column with time
Cross-linked phases
- many bonded phases exist, but most separations can be formed with the following phases:
Dimethylpolysiloxane
Methyl(phenyl)polysiloxane
Polyethylene glycol (Carbowax 20M)
CH3
O
CH3
Si
CH3
C6H5
Si
CH3
Si
C6H5
HO
advantages:
- more stable than coated liquid phases
- can be placed on support with thinner and more uniform thickness than
liquid phases
Column support
There are two main types of supports used in GC:
Packed columns
large sample capacity
preparative work
Capillary (open-tubular) columns
higher efficiency
smaller sample size
analytical applications
Gradient elution - change column condition with time which changes retention of solutes to
overcome general elution problem 1) Column 2) Temperature program 3) Flow
ISOTHERMAL
Column temp. 120oC
Programmed temp.
(30oC to 180oC) (5o/min)
Design
- based on electronic circuit known as a Wheatstone bridge.
- circuit consists of an arrangement of four resistors with a fixed current applied to them.
- thermal conductivity changes with presence of other components in the mobile phase.
- the voltage between points (+) and (-) will be zero as long as the resistances in the
different arms of the circuit are properly balanced
Considerations
- mobile phase must have very different thermal conductivity then solutes being
separated.
- most compounds separated in GC have thermal conductivity of about 1-4X10-5.
- H2 and He are carrier gases with significantly different thermal conductivity values (6-10
times greater than those of organic compounds).
- H2 reacts with metal oxides present on the resistors, so not used.
- Other carrier gases have a similar thermal conductivity as those of organic compounds.
Advantages:
- truly universal detector
applicable to the detection of any compound in GC
- non-destructive
useful for detecting compounds from preparative-scale columns
useful in combination with other types of GC detectors
Disadvantages:
- detect mobile phase impurities
- sensitive to changes in flow-rates
- limit of detection
~ 10-7 M
much higher then other GC detectors
Advantages:
- universal detector for organics
- doesnt respond to common inorganic compounds
- mobile phase impurities not detected
- carrier gases not detected
- limit of detection: FID is 1000x better than TCD
- linear and dynamic range better than TCD
Disadvantage:
- destructive detector
Principle of Operation
- same basic principal as FID
- measures production of ions when a solute
is burned in a flame
- ions are collected at an electrode to
create a current
- contains a small amount of alkali metal
vapor in the flame
- enhances the formation of ions from
nitrogen- and phosphorus- containing compounds
S + S S 2*
S + S + M S2* + M (third body)
PO + OH + H2 HPO* + H2O
526 nm is given due to HPO*
Concentration-sensitive vs
Mass-sensitive Detector
Concentration-sensitive detector responds to the
concentration of the analyte in the mobile phase
(the mobile phase is directly involved in the
signal formation). (e.g. TCD and ECD).
Mass-sensitive detector responds to the number
of molecules or ions that contact with the
detector (the mobile phase is not directly
involved in the signal formation). (e.g. FID, AED,
and FPD).
Adsorption on column
packing and capillary walls
Silanol groups have strong affinity for polar organic molecules.
Stationary Phase
Low volatility
Thermal stability
Chemical inertness
Solvent characteristic (k and etc)
Qualitative Analysis
Retention Index (I)
I for an analyte is a measure of the rate at which it is
carried through a column compared with the rate of
movement of two normal alkanes one that moves faster
than the analyte and the other that moves more slowly.
I of alkanes, by definition, is 100 times the number of
carbon atom they contain regardless of the column
packing, temperature or other conditions
e.g. butane,
I = 400
pentane,
I = 500