Glossary
of Gas Chromatography Terms
Baseline
The baseline
is the line drawn by the data system when the only signal
from the detector is from the mobile phase.
Capillary
Gas Chromatography (Capillary GC)
Gas chromatographic
separation in a capillary column
Capillary
Columns
Glass capillaries
filled with stationary phase diameter: 0.2 – 1.0mm, length:
5-50m
Carrier
gas
inert
gas that constantly flows through the chromatography column
and detector. Carrier gas mobilizes the sample by pushing
it through the column. Inert refers to non-reactivity of
the carrier gas with the sample and a low response of the
detector to the carrier gas.
Chromatography
Separation
method
Chromatography
column
length of metal or fused silica tubing filled or coated
with one or more packing materials that separates the compounds
of interest as the sample mixture passes through.
Detector
sensor that produces a measurable signal when certain molecules
pass through it.
Detectors
in GC
- ECD
- electron capture detector
- ELCD
- electrolytic-conductivity detector
- FID
- flame ionization detector
- FPD
- flame photometric detector
- MSD
- mass selective detector
- NPD
- nitrogen phosphorous detector
- TCD
- thermal conductivity detector
Direct
injection
Occurs when sample enters an inlet and is swept into a column
by carrier-gas flow. No sample splitting or venting occurs
during or after the injection.
Electron-capture
detector (ECD)
detector that is especially sensitive to halogen-containing
molecules. Thermal electrons generated by the radioactive
decay of 63Ni create a small, steady current
within the detector. This current is measurably reduced
when certain molecules capture electrons as they pass through
the detector.
Electrolytic-conductivity
detector
In
ELCD, the detector catalytically reacts halogen-containing
solutes with hydrogen (reductive mode) to produce strong
acid by-products that are dissolved in a working fluid.
The acids dissociate and the detector measures increased
electrolytic conductivity. Other operating modes modify
the chemistry for response to nitrogen- or sulphur-containing
substances.
Flame
ionization detector (FID)
Most
common GC detector – detects all solutes containing at least
1 CHn unit.
Flame
photometric detector (FPD)
Highly selective
for solutes containing S- or Sn-atoms
Gas
chromatograph (GC)
type
of instrument based on the injection of component mixtures
onto a chromatography column, separation of the components
as the mixture passes through the column, and sensing of
the components of interest as they elute into a detector.
Gas sampling valve (GSV)
A
multiple-port, two-position valve that changes the direction
of gas flows through chromatography columns and other parts
of an instrument. Used to fill a sample loop with sample
then inject the loop contents onto the column.
Headspace
sampling
Gas-phase sampling technique in which solute is removed
from an enclosed space above a solid or liquid sample.
Ion-trap
detector
A
mass spectrometric (MS) detector that uses an ion-trap device
to generate mass spectra.
Inert
gases
N2,
He, H2
Nitrogen
phosphorous detector (NPD)
Nitrogen/phosphorus
selective detector detects only solutes with N and/or P-atoms.
On-column
injection (OCI)
In
on-column injection, sample enters the column directly from
the syringe and does not contact other surfaces. On-column
injection usually signifies cold injection for capillary
columns.
Packing
material
granular, solid-phase powder, sometimes also coated with
a liquid phase, that is used to fill a chromatography column.
The packing material of a column is chosen for its ability
to separate the molecules of interest from one another.
Packing materials typically separate molecules by their
size (molecular sieves), boiling points, or polarities.
Peak
When the
detector registers the presence of a compound, the normal
baseline signal it sends to the data system changes, resulting
in a deflection from the baseline called a peak. Well resolved
peaks are symmetrical, touch the baseline, and do not interfere
with other peaks.
Peak
capacity
The amount of solute that can be injected without a significant
loss of column efficiency.
Purge-and-trap
sampling
A
concentration technique for volatile solutes. Sample is
purged with an inert gas that entrains volatile components
onto an adsorptive trap. The trap is then heated to desorb
trapped components into a GC column.
Sample
loop
length of hollow metal tubing whose fixed volume is filled
with sample to a repeatable pressure and its contents injected
onto a chromatography column. Consistent sample loop volume,
pressure and temperature ensure that the same amount of
sample is injected for every analysis.
Selectivity
The fundamental ability of a stationary phase toretain substances
selectively based upon their chemical characteristics, including
vapour pressure and polarity.
Sensitivity
The degree of detector response to a specified solute amount
per unit time or per unit volume.
Split
injection
The sample size is adjusted to
suit capillary column requirements by splitting off a major
fraction of sample vapours in the inlet so that as little
as 0.1% enters the column. The rest is vented.
Splitless
injection
A derivative of split injection.
During the first 0.5–4 min of sampling, the sample is not
split and enters only the column. Splitting is restored
afterward to purge the sample remaining in the inlet. As
much as 99% of the sample enters the column.
Thermal
Conductivity detector (TCD)
Unselective,
detects all types of solutes