Optimize Analysis of Polar and Coeluting VOCs in Whole Air Canister Samples Using an Rtx®-VMS GC Column
Applications | 2016 | RestekInstrumentation
Significance of the Topic:
Analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) collected in canisters under EPA Method TO-15 is essential for air quality assessment and regulatory compliance. Performance-based flexibility in column selection enables laboratories to tailor methods for target compound lists, improve throughput, and maintain rigorous detection limits and accuracy.
Objectives and Overview:
This study compared various 30 m GC columns against TO-15 performance criteria, aiming to shorten run times and resolve challenging polar and coeluting VOCs. A 65-compound mix representative of common monitoring targets was used to assess chromatographic efficiency, peak shape, and coelution.
Methodology and Instrumentation:
Instrument Setup:
Main Results and Discussion:
Rtx-VMS achieved a complete VOC separation in 13.5 minutes, meeting TO-15 criteria for blanks (<0.2 ppbv), MDLs (≤0.5 ppbv), precision (<25% RSD) and audit accuracy (±30%). Polar analytes such as ethanol and isopropyl alcohol exhibited symmetrical peak shapes with minimal tailing. Critically coeluting pairs like n-butane and 1,3-butadiene were baseline separated, avoiding mass spectral interferences that challenge MS quantification alone.
Benefits and Practical Applications:
Future Trends and Opportunities:
Conclusion:
The Rtx-VMS column offers the best overall performance for 65 common TO-15 VOCs in canister samples, combining fast run times, robust polar analyte peak shapes, and complete separation of coeluting species. Its fit-for-purpose design streamlines environmental VOC analysis while meeting stringent EPA performance criteria.
References:
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, Purge and Trap, GC/SQ, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, Markes, Restek
Summary
Optimizing Analysis of Polar and Coeluting VOCs in Whole Air Canister Samples Using an Rtx-VMS GC Column
Significance of the Topic:
Analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) collected in canisters under EPA Method TO-15 is essential for air quality assessment and regulatory compliance. Performance-based flexibility in column selection enables laboratories to tailor methods for target compound lists, improve throughput, and maintain rigorous detection limits and accuracy.
Objectives and Overview:
This study compared various 30 m GC columns against TO-15 performance criteria, aiming to shorten run times and resolve challenging polar and coeluting VOCs. A 65-compound mix representative of common monitoring targets was used to assess chromatographic efficiency, peak shape, and coelution.
Methodology and Instrumentation:
- Column tested: Rtx-VMS (30 m × 0.32 mm I.D. × 1.80 µm).
- GC program: initial hold at 32 °C, ramp to 150 °C at 11 °C/min, then to 230 °C at 33 °C/min.
- Carrier gas: helium constant flow (2.0 mL/min, 51 cm/s at 32 °C).
- Detector: quadrupole mass spectrometer scanning 35–250 amu at ~3.3 scans/sec.
- Preconcentration: Tenax® trap, cryofocus at –160 °C, direct 200 cc injection.
Instrument Setup:
- GC: Agilent 7890B (or HP 6890) with 5977A (or 5973) MSD.
- Ionization: EI at 70 eV, quadrupole at 150 °C.
- Preconcentrator: Nutech 8900DS or Markes CIA Advantage.
Main Results and Discussion:
Rtx-VMS achieved a complete VOC separation in 13.5 minutes, meeting TO-15 criteria for blanks (<0.2 ppbv), MDLs (≤0.5 ppbv), precision (<25% RSD) and audit accuracy (±30%). Polar analytes such as ethanol and isopropyl alcohol exhibited symmetrical peak shapes with minimal tailing. Critically coeluting pairs like n-butane and 1,3-butadiene were baseline separated, avoiding mass spectral interferences that challenge MS quantification alone.
Benefits and Practical Applications:
- Reduced analysis time by more than half compared to 60 m columns.
- Even distribution of analytes across the chromatogram simplifies quantitation and calibration.
- Enhanced peak shape and resolution improve accuracy, detection limits, and reproducibility.
- Performance-based compliance with EPA Method TO-15 for diverse target lists.
Future Trends and Opportunities:
- Development of purpose-designed stationary phases for emerging VOCs and polar compounds.
- Integration of microcolumn and fast GC techniques for ultra-rapid screening.
- Coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry and data-driven optimization (e.g., AI-guided flow and heating profiles).
- Advanced preconcentration sorbents and cryofocusing technologies to extend method sensitivity.
Conclusion:
The Rtx-VMS column offers the best overall performance for 65 common TO-15 VOCs in canister samples, combining fast run times, robust polar analyte peak shapes, and complete separation of coeluting species. Its fit-for-purpose design streamlines environmental VOC analysis while meeting stringent EPA performance criteria.
References:
- U.S. EPA Compendium Method TO-15 (1999).
- Herrington JS, Rapid determination of TO-15 VOCs, Restek Application Note EVAN1725A-UNV (2014).
- Herrington JS, Air columns – part II: 30 m column for EPA TO-15, ChromaBLOGraphy (2013).
- Cochran J, Speed optimized flow and optimal heating rate, ChromaBLOGraphy (2010).
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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