GC/MS Analysis of Semivolatile Organic Compounds Using an Agilent J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC Column
Applications | 2019 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Accurate analysis of semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) in environmental waters is critical for public health and regulatory compliance. US EPA Method 525.2 is widely used for detecting a broad range of semivolatiles at trace levels in drinking water. High thermal stability, inertness, and reproducible performance of gas chromatography columns are key to meeting method requirements, reducing downtime, and ensuring quality control in routine environmental monitoring.
This application note evaluates the performance of the Agilent J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column in an Intuvo 9000 GC system coupled to a 5977B mass selective detector. The goals were to assess column thermal stability under accelerated cycling, demonstrate compliance with EPA 525.2 calibration and performance check criteria, and compare chromatographic selectivity to a standard VF-5ms column.
The study employed:
Columns were thermally cycled between 100 °C and 330 °C at 250 °C/min for up to 5 818 cycles. Leak testing was conducted after each interval. SVOC calibration standards were prepared at 10 ng/mL to 10 µg/mL with isotopically labeled internal standards. Performance check solutions (DFTPP, endrin, 4,4’-DDT) were analyzed to verify tune and degradation limits.
Column film thickness and inertness remained stable after prolonged exposure to 330 °C; breakage occurred only after excessive aging at 389–1 462 hours due to polyimide damage. No leaks were detected before failure. The Intuvo system easily met EPA 525.2 performance check criteria, with degradation of DDT and endrin below 4 %. Calibration linearity for 25 SVOCs showed average correlation coefficients >0.9978 and RSDs under 14 %. Critical isomer pairs (phenanthrene/anthracene, benz[a]anthracene/chrysene) achieved full baseline resolution.
Using the J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column in an Intuvo 9000 GC–5977B MSD system provides:
Advances in inert column coatings and instrument miniaturization may further enhance sensitivity for emerging contaminants. Coupling Intuvo technology with high-resolution MS or tandem MS offers potential for broader compound coverage and lower detection limits in environmental and industrial applications.
The Agilent J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column demonstrates exceptional thermal stability, inertness, and chromatographic performance for semivolatile analysis under EPA 525.2 conditions. Its rapid ramping capability and reproducible separations support stringent environmental monitoring and quality control demands.
1. US EPA Method 525.2, Methods for the Determination of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water Supplement III, EPA, Cincinnati, OH (1995).
2. Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991-9277EN: Endrin and DDT Stability Study for Drinking Water Method EPA 525.2 on the Intuvo (2018).
GC/MSD, GC/SQ, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Accurate analysis of semivolatile organic compounds (SVOCs) in environmental waters is critical for public health and regulatory compliance. US EPA Method 525.2 is widely used for detecting a broad range of semivolatiles at trace levels in drinking water. High thermal stability, inertness, and reproducible performance of gas chromatography columns are key to meeting method requirements, reducing downtime, and ensuring quality control in routine environmental monitoring.
Study Objectives and Overview
This application note evaluates the performance of the Agilent J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column in an Intuvo 9000 GC system coupled to a 5977B mass selective detector. The goals were to assess column thermal stability under accelerated cycling, demonstrate compliance with EPA 525.2 calibration and performance check criteria, and compare chromatographic selectivity to a standard VF-5ms column.
Instrumentation
The study employed:
- An Agilent Intuvo 9000 GC with track-oven design
- J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column (30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 0.25 μm film)
- Agilent 5977B MSD operating in both scan and SIM modes
- Helium carrier gas in constant flow
- Agilent 7890B GC/5977A MSD for comparative tests
Methodology
Columns were thermally cycled between 100 °C and 330 °C at 250 °C/min for up to 5 818 cycles. Leak testing was conducted after each interval. SVOC calibration standards were prepared at 10 ng/mL to 10 µg/mL with isotopically labeled internal standards. Performance check solutions (DFTPP, endrin, 4,4’-DDT) were analyzed to verify tune and degradation limits.
Results and Discussion
Column film thickness and inertness remained stable after prolonged exposure to 330 °C; breakage occurred only after excessive aging at 389–1 462 hours due to polyimide damage. No leaks were detected before failure. The Intuvo system easily met EPA 525.2 performance check criteria, with degradation of DDT and endrin below 4 %. Calibration linearity for 25 SVOCs showed average correlation coefficients >0.9978 and RSDs under 14 %. Critical isomer pairs (phenanthrene/anthracene, benz[a]anthracene/chrysene) achieved full baseline resolution.
Practical Benefits and Applications
Using the J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column in an Intuvo 9000 GC–5977B MSD system provides:
- High throughput with rapid temperature ramps
- Robust performance for routine EPA 525.2 analyses
- Reduced column bleed and maintenance intervals
- Reliable separation of complex SVOC mixtures
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advances in inert column coatings and instrument miniaturization may further enhance sensitivity for emerging contaminants. Coupling Intuvo technology with high-resolution MS or tandem MS offers potential for broader compound coverage and lower detection limits in environmental and industrial applications.
Conclusion
The Agilent J&W VF-5ms Intuvo GC column demonstrates exceptional thermal stability, inertness, and chromatographic performance for semivolatile analysis under EPA 525.2 conditions. Its rapid ramping capability and reproducible separations support stringent environmental monitoring and quality control demands.
References
1. US EPA Method 525.2, Methods for the Determination of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water Supplement III, EPA, Cincinnati, OH (1995).
2. Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991-9277EN: Endrin and DDT Stability Study for Drinking Water Method EPA 525.2 on the Intuvo (2018).
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