Fast GC-MS Analysis of Semi-Volatile Organic Compounds: Migrating from Helium to Hydrogen as a Carrier Gas in US EPA Method 8270
Applications | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The growing scarcity and cost of helium have driven analytical laboratories to seek alternative carrier gases for gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) workflows. Hydrogen offers lower viscosity and higher optimal linear velocity, which can shorten analysis times and improve chromatographic efficiency. Adapting complex regulated methods such as US EPA Method 8270 for semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) to hydrogen carrier gas can deliver both economic and performance advantages.
This work aimed to transfer US EPA Method 8270 from helium to hydrogen carrier gas while maintaining or improving method performance. Key goals included reconfiguring column dimensions and inlet pressures, installing a hydrogen kit on a single-quadrupole mass spectrometer, and optimizing bake-out procedures for source conditioning. The study evaluated peak shape, resolution, linearity, sensitivity, run time, and robustness.
Sample Preparation
Stabilization Bake-Out
Switching to hydrogen carrier gas for EPA Method 8270 enables faster analysis, reduced operating costs, and improved chromatographic efficiency without compromising sensitivity or quantitative reliability. This approach supports high-throughput environmental monitoring, wastewater testing, and industrial quality control laboratories facing helium supply constraints.
Ongoing advances may include integration of hydrogen-compatible detectors, further miniaturization of column formats, enhanced source designs to mitigate reactive gas effects, and application of machine-learning algorithms for real-time method optimization. Broader adoption of hydrogen generators and inline purification will also improve safety and sustainability in analytical workflows.
This study demonstrates that US EPA Method 8270 can be successfully migrated from helium to hydrogen carrier gas on a TRACE 1310 GC–ISQ MS platform. With targeted hardware modifications and method reoptimization, hydrogen delivers comparable sensitivity, excellent peak shape, robust quantitation, and shorter analysis times, offering a practical solution amid helium scarcity.
1. EPA Method 8270D: Semivolatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry
GC/MSD, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The growing scarcity and cost of helium have driven analytical laboratories to seek alternative carrier gases for gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC-MS) workflows. Hydrogen offers lower viscosity and higher optimal linear velocity, which can shorten analysis times and improve chromatographic efficiency. Adapting complex regulated methods such as US EPA Method 8270 for semi-volatile organic compounds (SVOCs) to hydrogen carrier gas can deliver both economic and performance advantages.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work aimed to transfer US EPA Method 8270 from helium to hydrogen carrier gas while maintaining or improving method performance. Key goals included reconfiguring column dimensions and inlet pressures, installing a hydrogen kit on a single-quadrupole mass spectrometer, and optimizing bake-out procedures for source conditioning. The study evaluated peak shape, resolution, linearity, sensitivity, run time, and robustness.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Preparation
- Standards diluted in methylene chloride; performance mix at 50 ppm
- Calibration range 1–200 ppm with internal standards and surrogates at 40 ppm
- TRACE 1310 GC with split/splitless injector in split mode (1 µL injection)
- Moved from 30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.5 µm TG-5MS column to 20 m × 0.18 mm × 0.36 µm to compensate for hydrogen’s lower viscosity
- Optimized inlet pressure to achieve 1 mL/min column flow
- ISQ single-quadrupole MS fitted with a hydrogen carrier kit
- Source bake-out at 350 °C with 4 mL/min hydrogen for one hour, then reduced to 1 mL/min at 325 °C
- Acquisition via Xcalibur 2.0; processing in Target 4.14 with direct target processing
Used Instrumentation
- Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 Gas Chromatograph
- Thermo Scientific ISQ Single Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer with hydrogen kit
- TraceGOLD TG-5MS columns (0.25 mm and 0.18 mm i.d.)
- Thermo Scientific Xcalibur and Target software packages
Results and Discussion
Stabilization Bake-Out
- High-flow hydrogen bake-out removed residual contaminants along the flow path
- Water protonation monitored by m/z 19; low-mass hydrocarbon signals declined after one-hour bake-out
- Reducing column i.d. counteracts hydrogen’s low viscosity, enabling practical inlet pressures
- Higher pressure reduced solvent tailing of methylene chloride
- Hydrogen’s higher optimal velocity yielded narrower peaks for polynuclear aromatic hydrocarbons
- Critical separations—e.g., benzo[g,h]fluoranthene—were maintained or improved
- Calibration curves from 1 to 200 ppm achieved R² > 0.99 for all target analytes
- Relative standard deviations remained within method criteria
- Instrument detection limits averaged 0.082 ppm with helium and 0.15 ppm with hydrogen
- Most analytes had IDLs around 0.1 ppm
- Total GC cycle shortened by up to 20 % due to hydrogen’s higher linear velocity
- DFTPP ion ratios remained stable over extended runs
- Check standards and 5 % diesel matrix samples met QC criteria for retention times and ion ratios
Benefits and Practical Applications
Switching to hydrogen carrier gas for EPA Method 8270 enables faster analysis, reduced operating costs, and improved chromatographic efficiency without compromising sensitivity or quantitative reliability. This approach supports high-throughput environmental monitoring, wastewater testing, and industrial quality control laboratories facing helium supply constraints.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Ongoing advances may include integration of hydrogen-compatible detectors, further miniaturization of column formats, enhanced source designs to mitigate reactive gas effects, and application of machine-learning algorithms for real-time method optimization. Broader adoption of hydrogen generators and inline purification will also improve safety and sustainability in analytical workflows.
Conclusion
This study demonstrates that US EPA Method 8270 can be successfully migrated from helium to hydrogen carrier gas on a TRACE 1310 GC–ISQ MS platform. With targeted hardware modifications and method reoptimization, hydrogen delivers comparable sensitivity, excellent peak shape, robust quantitation, and shorter analysis times, offering a practical solution amid helium scarcity.
References
1. EPA Method 8270D: Semivolatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry
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