How to Convert from Helium to Hydrogen as a Carrier Gas in Gas Chromatography
Technical notes | 2012 | Parker HannifinInstrumentation
Modern gas chromatography workflows face helium shortages and high costs. Transitioning to hydrogen carrier gas produced in-house offers equivalent chromatographic performance while enhancing laboratory safety, reducing operational expense, and ensuring continuous supply.
This guide presents a structured five-step procedure to convert GC systems from helium to hydrogen carrier gas using on-site gas generators. Key objectives include documenting existing conditions, performing maintenance, installing dedicated gas lines and purifiers, optimizing gas flows and calibration, and replacing cylinder supplies with generator systems. A comparative cost and safety analysis highlights the advantages of in-house gas production.
Hydrogen carrier gas demonstrated chromatographic equivalence to helium across isothermal and bacterial fatty acid methyl ester separations. Comparable retention factors, efficiency values, and peak shapes were achieved at optimized linear gas velocities. Figures show that hydrogen can replicate or improve analysis speed and resolution without compromising chromatographic performance.
In-house gas generation is poised to integrate with automated GC systems for real-time flow optimization. Advances in membrane and catalyst technologies may further enhance gas purity and efficiency. Adoption across GC-MS, QA/QC, and high throughput platforms will support sustainable laboratory practices. Digital monitoring and predictive maintenance will streamline gas management.
Converting from helium to hydrogen carrier gas using in-house generators delivers robust chromatographic performance while maximizing safety, cost efficiency, and operational convenience. The outlined method offers a clear pathway for laboratories to achieve resilient and sustainable gas supply.
GC, GC/MSD
IndustriesManufacturerParker Hannifin
Summary
Význam tématu
Modern gas chromatography workflows face helium shortages and high costs. Transitioning to hydrogen carrier gas produced in-house offers equivalent chromatographic performance while enhancing laboratory safety, reducing operational expense, and ensuring continuous supply.
Cíle a přehled studie / článku
This guide presents a structured five-step procedure to convert GC systems from helium to hydrogen carrier gas using on-site gas generators. Key objectives include documenting existing conditions, performing maintenance, installing dedicated gas lines and purifiers, optimizing gas flows and calibration, and replacing cylinder supplies with generator systems. A comparative cost and safety analysis highlights the advantages of in-house gas production.
Použitá metodika a instrumentace
- Review of system flows and retention parameters including septum and make-up gas rates
- Routine maintenance with purifier, septum, liner, and detector cleaning
- Installation of new hydrogen and nitrogen lines with inline purifiers for 99.9999 purity
- Flow establishment procedures covering carrier and detector gas adjustments, oven purging, and calibration runs
- Integration of in-house gas generators replacing cylinders
Použitá instrumentace
- Hydrogen generators producing 150 to 1200 cc per minute of >99.99999 purity hydrogen
- Zero air generators delivering up to 30 liters per minute of UHPC zero grade air
- Nitrogen generators supplying 99.99 to 99.9999 ultra high purity nitrogen at flows to 12 liters per minute
- GC gas stations combining hydrogen and zero air production for multiple FIDs and columns
Hlavní výsledky a diskuse
Hydrogen carrier gas demonstrated chromatographic equivalence to helium across isothermal and bacterial fatty acid methyl ester separations. Comparable retention factors, efficiency values, and peak shapes were achieved at optimized linear gas velocities. Figures show that hydrogen can replicate or improve analysis speed and resolution without compromising chromatographic performance.
Přínosy a praktické využití metody
- Enhanced safety by eliminating high pressure cylinders and reducing leak hazards
- Significant cost savings with in-house gas generation and minimal maintenance fees
- Continuous supply with minimal user intervention and zero downtime for cylinder changeovers
- Improved analytical throughput and flexibility in adjustment of flow parameters
Budoucí trendy a možnosti využití
In-house gas generation is poised to integrate with automated GC systems for real-time flow optimization. Advances in membrane and catalyst technologies may further enhance gas purity and efficiency. Adoption across GC-MS, QA/QC, and high throughput platforms will support sustainable laboratory practices. Digital monitoring and predictive maintenance will streamline gas management.
Závěr
Converting from helium to hydrogen carrier gas using in-house generators delivers robust chromatographic performance while maximizing safety, cost efficiency, and operational convenience. The outlined method offers a clear pathway for laboratories to achieve resilient and sustainable gas supply.
Reference
- Data and chromatograms reprinted with permission from Sigma Aldrich Co
- Figures and application notes reprinted with permission from Supelco, Bellefonte PA
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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