At-column heating and a resistively heated, liquid-cooled thermal modulator for a low-resource bench-top GC×GC
Hasselbrink, Ernest F.; Waite, J. Hunter; Sacks, Richard D.
2006-05
Citation
Hasselbrink, Ernest; Waite, J. Hunter; Sacks, Richard (2006). "At-column heating and a resistively heated, liquid-cooled thermal modulator for a low-resource bench-top GC×GC." Journal of Separation Science 29(7): 1001-1008. <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/50683>
Abstract
A transportable GC×GC instrument is under development for on-site applications that would benefit from the enhanced resolution and powers of detection, which can be achieved by this method. In the present study, a low-resource GC×GC instrument using an electrically heated and liquid-cooled single-stage thermal modulator that requires no cryogenic materials is evaluated. The instrument also uses at-column heating, thus eliminating the need for a convection oven to house the two columns. The stainless-steel modulator tube is coated with PDMS, which can be heated to 350°C for sample injection into the second-dimension column. The modulator is cooled to –30°C by a 100 mL/min flow of PEG by means of a commercial liquid chiller and a small recirculating pump. Resistive heating of the modulator tube is provided by a programmable power supply, which uses a voltage program that results in increasing modulator temperature during an analysis. This, together with more rapid cooling by the use of a liquid cooling medium, results in reduced solute breakthrough following each heating cycle as the modulator cools to a temperature where quantitative trapping resumes. As a result, modulated peak widths at half-height of less than 40 ms are observed. Design and performance details are presented along with chromatograms of gasoline and an essential oil sample.Publisher
WILEY-VCH Verlag
ISSN
1615-9306 1615-9314
Other DOIs
PMID
16833233
Types
Article
URI
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez?cmd=retrieve&db=pubmed&list_uids=16833233&dopt=citationMetadata
Show full item recordCollections
Accessibility: If you are unable to use this file in its current format, please select the Contact Us link and we can modify it to make it more accessible to you.