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Highly Inert Capillary GC Columns:Less Activity, Better Peak Shape, and more Sample Signal

Presentations | 2010 | Agilent Technologies | PittconInstrumentation
GC columns, Consumables
Industries
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Significance of the Topic


High inertness in capillary gas chromatography columns is essential for obtaining sharp, symmetric peaks and maximizing sensitivity, especially when analyzing active, trace or ultra-trace analytes. Reduced adsorption and chemical activity on column surfaces improve quantitative accuracy and reproducibility across demanding applications in environmental, pharmaceutical, food and forensic analysis.

Objectives and Overview


This presentation traces the evolution of column inertness quality control from early Grob-type test mixes through DB-5ms checks to the modern “Ultra Inert” (UI) mix. It evaluates the performance of Agilent J&W Ultra Inert GC columns under standardized tests and illustrates their advantages through real-world applications. Key take-away messages and best practices for UI column use are provided.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Standard inertness test procedures were applied:
  • Grob-type mix (acid, base and nonpolar probes) on DB-5ms UI columns
  • DB-5ms test mix (2-ethylhexanoic acid, dichlorohexylamine, 1,6-hexanediol, etc.)
  • UI mix (fully probative probes covering acids, bases, alcohols, phosphates and alkanes)

Typical operating conditions:
  • Injections: 0.02–1.0 µL split or splitless on Agilent 7683B autosampler
  • Carrier gases: hydrogen or helium constant pressure (30–38 cm/s)
  • Detectors: FID (325 °C) or MS(MSD/triple-quad) with transfer line 280–290 °C
  • Oven: isothermal or programmed ramps tailored to sample class

Used Instrumentation


  • Agilent 6890N/7890A GC systems
  • Agilent 5975B Single Quadrupole or 7000A Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometers
  • Agilent J&W Ultra Inert DB-5ms, HP-5ms or DB-1ms columns
  • Agilent 7683 or 7683B autosamplers with deactivated glass-wool liners

Main Results and Discussion


• UI columns exhibited minimal activity in UI test mix, clearly outperforming competitor “premium” columns.
• DB-5ms and UI mixes effectively distinguished high-inertness columns by retention and peak shape of acids, bases and polar compounds.
• Application examples demonstrated enhanced signal-to-noise and peak symmetry:
  • Drugs of abuse (amphetamines, opioids, cannabinoids, fentanyl) by GC-MS/MS
  • Semi-volatiles and PAHs at sub-ng levels with MS detection
  • Pesticides in essential oils with high split ratios
  • Volatile profiles in lavender and citrus oils
  • Phthalate screening in consumer plastics

Benefits and Practical Applications


Ultra Inert columns deliver:
  • Lower active sites and reduced adsorption for acidic, basic and polar analytes
  • Improved peak symmetry and narrower peak widths
  • Higher signal intensity and better quantitation at trace levels
  • Reliable performance across a wide range of sample types and analytical platforms

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Advances may include:
  • Customized inertness testing protocols for emerging analytes (biomarkers, metabolites)
  • Integration with fast GC and super-critical fluid chromatography
  • Expanded use in petrochemical, environmental and food safety laboratories
  • Development of new stationary phases combining inertness with selectivity

Conclusion


Agilent J&W Ultra Inert capillary columns set a new benchmark for chemical inertness in GC analysis. By minimizing active sites and enhancing peak performance, they are the ideal choice for demanding trace level and active analyte applications, ensuring robust, reproducible and high-sensitivity results.

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