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J Chromatogr A


Title:Role of the retaining precolumn in large-volume on-column injections of volatiles to gas chromatography
Author(s):Kristenson EM; Kamminga DA; Catalina MI; Espiga C; Vreuls RJ; Brinkman UA;
Address:"Vrije Universiteit, Faculty of Science, Department of Analytical Chemistry and Applied Spectroscopy, de Boelelaan 1083, 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands. kristens@chem.vu.nl"
Journal Title:J Chromatogr A
Year:2002
Volume:975
Issue:1
Page Number:95 - 104
DOI: 10.1016/s0021-9673(02)01330-4
ISSN/ISBN:0021-9673 (Print) 0021-9673 (Linking)
Abstract:"In the present study the retaining precolumn, which is commonly used in a set-up for large-volume on-column injections, or when solid-phase extraction (SPE) or liquid chromatography is coupled to gas chromatography (CC), was removed after varying its length from the standard length of 3 m down to zero. A dramatic increase of the evaporation rate of the injected organic solvent was obtained from a typical value of 100 microl/min up to 300 microl/min. The increased evaporation rate allowed (i) injection of a larger volume in the same retention gap, (ii) faster injection/transfer of the organic solvent and (iii) reduction of the transfer temperature. As volatile compounds under partially concurrent solvent evaporation conditions are easily lost once the organic solvent has been removed via a solvent-vapour exit (SVE), the parameters for large-volume injection, i.e. the evaporation rate and injection speed, were optimised using accurate measurements of the real flow-rate of the carrier gas into the GC system. All these options have been evaluated over the last 4 years. In order to demonstrate that omitting the retaining precolumn had no effect on the application range of the on-column interface, analytes as volatile as benzene were injected into GC-MS using 50-200 microl of n-pentane solutions. Contaminants were extracted from river water and wastewater into n-pentane using in-vial liquid-liquid extraction. The detection limits for benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and m-xylene were approximately 10 ng/l. To obtain optimum results the SVE had to be closed 1 s before the end of evaporation. Several brands of n-pentane were analysed to check for the presence of benzene. Most of them contained interfering compounds and benzene at the low microg/l level and therefore had to be cleaned by means of column chromatography. As another example C8-C17 alkylphenones were extracted from wastewater with n-hexane. Detection limits were 10-40 ng/l"
Keywords:"Chromatography, Gas/*instrumentation Sensitivity and Specificity Volatilization;"
Notes:"MedlineKristenson, E Maria Kamminga, Dirk A Catalina, M Isabel Espiga, Cristina Vreuls, Rene J J Brinkman, Udo A Th eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't Netherlands 2002/12/03 J Chromatogr A. 2002 Oct 25; 975(1):95-104. doi: 10.1016/s0021-9673(02)01330-4"

 
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