| Literature DB >> 35423345 |
Pannipa Janta1, Duangkamol Pinyo2, Yamonporn Yodta2, Porames Vasasiri2, Meinolf Weidenbach3, Matthias Pursch4, Xiuhan Grace Yang5, Chadin Kulsing1,6.
Abstract
Experimental and data analysis approaches in multidimensional gas chromatography (MDGC) comprising comprehensive multiple heart-cut (H/C) and comprehensive two dimensional GC (GC × GC) were developed with an example application illustrated for analysis of a technical glycol precursor sample. The GC × GC system employed a long 1D (30 m) and a short 2D (5 m) column with a flow modulator and a Deans switch (DS) as a splitter; meanwhile. The H/C system was applied solely as a DS located between long 1D (30 m) and 2D (60 m) columns without use of cryogenic trapping devices. The effects of injection time and 2D column flow in GC × GC and the impacts of H/C window and number of injections (total analysis time) in H/C analysis were investigated. The analysis performance for each condition was evaluated according to peak capacity and number of separated compounds. The continuum between the two techniques was then established via the relationship between analysis time and analysis performance. The separation performances were improved with longer analysis time so that the suitable condition was selected within this compromise. Under the selected conditions, volatile compounds in the technical glycol precursor sample were identified according to the match between the experimental MS spectra and first dimensional retention indices (1 I) with that from the NIST2014 database and literature. An hour analysis with GC × GC resulted in a total peak capacity of 798, number of separated peaks of 61 and average MS match score of 887 ± 35; meanwhile, the corresponding numbers were improved to be 9198, 107 and 898 ± 24, respectively, with the 25 h comprehensive H/C analysis. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35423345 PMCID: PMC8695086 DOI: 10.1039/d0ra10495g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Comprehensive MDGC systems used in this study: (A) GC × GC and (B) comprehensive H/C MDGC. M = modulator and DS = Deans switch.
Fig. 2Effects of H/C window (tH/C) on separation performance in comprehensive H/C analyses (●): 1nc, 2nc, total nc, number of identified compounds and analysis time (A–E, respectively), using the same 1D and 2D column flows of 2.3 and 4.7 mL min−1, respectively. The number of identified compounds vs. analysis time plot is also shown in (F). The corresponding data for GC × GC analysis are shown by ×, and it can also be said that the H/C window in GC × GC is PM.
Fig. 3Comprehensive H/C analysis results using different H/C windows.
Fig. 4Comparison between the selected results in (A) comprehensive H/C and (B) GC × GC analyses used for compound identification in Table 1.
Volatile compound profile in technical glycol precursor obtained using different methodsa
| No. | Compound | GC × GC | Comprehensive H/C | Δ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Match score |
| Match score | |||
| 1 | Alcohol 1 | <600 | 940 | <600 | 922 | Not available |
| 2 | Alcohol 2 | <600 | 879 | <600 | 941 | Not available |
| 3 | Aldehyde 1 | <600 | 866 | Not available | ||
| 4 | Aldehyde 2 | <600 | 831 | <600 | 841 | Not available |
| 5 | Ether 1 | <600 | 949 | <600 | 934 | Not available |
| 6 | Ester 1 | 604 | 830 | ±13 | ||
| 7 | Aldehyde 3 | 618 | 937 | 621 | 933 | ±12 |
| 8 | Ketone 1 | 659 | 844 | 616 | 853 | ±25 |
| 9 | Cyclic ether 1 | 629 | 748 | ±4 | ||
| 10 | Ketone 2 | 657 | 926 | 637 | 773 | ±30 |
| 11 | Alcohol 4 | <600 | 857 | Not available | ||
| 12 | Alcohol 3 | <600 | 914 | <600 | 908 | Not available |
| 13 | Alkane 1 | 670 | 933 | 667 | 922 | ±17 |
| 14 | Ketone 3 | 667 | 819 | ±8 | ||
| 15 | Ketone 4 | 657 | 853 | 646 | 890 | 0 |
| 16 | Alcohol 5 | 661 | 937 | 663 | 933 | ±8 |
| 17 | Ether 2 | 680 | 832 | ±30 | ||
| 18 | Alcohol 6 | 710 | 935 | 688 | 921 | ±19 |
| 19 | Oxygenate 1 | 692 | 828 | ±6 | ||
| 20 | Ester 2 | 696 | 705 | ±1 | ||
| 21 | Ketone 5 | 722 | 924 | 719 | 925 | ±3 |
| 22 | Alcohol 7 | 754 | 814 | ±13 | ||
| 23 | Alkane 2 | 732 | 721 | 729 | 884 | ±4 |
| 24 | Alcohol 8 | 742 | 964 | 732 | 899 | ±14 |
| 25 | Aldehyde 4 | 741 | 931 | 741 | 930 | ±2 |
| 26 | Aldehyde 5 | 744 | 861 | ±25 | ||
| 27 | Alcohol 9 | 750 | 813 | ±6 | ||
| 28 | Ester 3 | 761 | 896 | 763 | 912 | ±1 |
| 29 | Ketone 6 | 769 | 927 | 763 | 928 | ±5 |
| 30 | Ether 3 | 778 | 781 | 766 | 845 | ±12 |
| 31 | Ester 4 | 809 | 915 | 807 | 760 | ±1 |
| 32 | Alcohol 10 | 833 | 787 | 830 | 926 | ±10 |
| 33 | Ester 5 | 836 | 882 | 833 | 868 | ±4 |
| 34 | Ester 6 | 856 | 947 | 852 | 945 | ±1 |
| 35 | Ester 7 | 873 | 707 | 869 | 906 | ±3 |
| 36 | Glycol 1 | 996 | 939 | 1006 | 951 | ±25 |
| 37 | Glycol 2 | 1046 | 877 | 1015 | 912 | ±2 |
| 38 | Glycol 3 | 1288 | 873 | 1284 | 877 | Not available |
ΔI = ±|I(experiment) − I(literature)|.
Compound identification was confirmed by injection of authentic standard.