Simultaneous Compound Identification and Quantification with Parallel Polyarc/FID and MS

Applications | 2017 | ARCInstrumentation
GC, GC/MSD, GC/SQ
Industries
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies, ARC

Summary

Importance of Topic


The combined use of a flame ionization detector enhanced by a Polyarc® reactor and a mass spectrometer in parallel addresses key challenges in gas chromatography: it delivers qualitative compound identification along with accurate quantification in a single injection without extensive calibration. This approach reduces analysis time and cost, simplifies workflows in environmental testing, petrochemical analysis, biofuel quality control, and other areas requiring rapid screening of complex mixtures.

Study Objectives and Overview


This application note demonstrates how to configure a single gas chromatograph inlet and column to feed both a Polyarc®/FID and a mass spectrometer via a constant-pressure split. The goals are to achieve:
  • Uniform, equimolar carbon response on the FID without compound-specific calibrations.
  • Reliable mass spectral identification of unknowns in the same run.
  • Stable and temperature-independent split ratio between detectors.

Methods and Instrumentation


The system is built around an Agilent 7890A GC with a capillary-optimized FID, an Agilent 5973 mass selective detector, and an Activated Research Company Polyarc® reactor. A three-way CFT gas flow splitter maintains a 10:1 split ratio (FID:MS) under constant splitter pressure controlled by an auxiliary electronic pressure controller (EPC). Key parameters include:
  • Carrier gas: He at 3 sccm with 3 sccm septum purge.
  • Splitter pressure set to 4 psi via Aux EPC (frit removed to ensure true pressure control).
  • Polyarc® reactor temperature: 293 °C with H₂ (35 sccm) and air (2.5 sccm) flows.
  • GC oven program: 40 °C (5 min), 15 °C/min to 125 °C, then 25 °C/min to 250 °C (2 min).
  • MS settings: 70 eV electron impact, scan 29–500 m/z, source 230 °C, quadrupole 150 °C.
  • FID settings: 300 °C, H₂ 1.5 sccm, air 350 sccm, He makeup 5 sccm, sampling at 100 Hz.

Main Results and Discussion


Validation with an eight-component mixture of alcohols and alkanes (250 ppm each) showed a constant split ratio over temperature ramps, yielding an average concentration error of 1.5 % (acceptance criterion 3 %).
An analysis of E85 gasoline without external calibration measured 88 wt % ethanol versus 86 wt % by ASTM D5501, demonstrating simultaneous qualitative and quantitative agreement within analytical uncertainty. The dual-detector configuration allowed unambiguous compound identification from the mass spectra and accurate quantification via the uniform FID response.

Benefits and Practical Applications


This parallel Polyarc®/FID-MS approach offers:
  • Calibration-free quantification for all organic compounds based on uniform carbon response.
  • Simultaneous acquisition of structural information and concentration data in one injection.
  • Reduced consumable costs and faster throughput by eliminating standard preparation.
  • High linear dynamic range and sensitivity to trace components.

Future Trends and Applications


Potential developments include expanding the Polyarc® reactor chemistry to heteroatom-containing analytes, integrating automated splitter pressure optimization, coupling with high-resolution MS or tandem MS for enhanced identification, and applying the technique to real-time process monitoring, environmental screening, and complex biological sample analysis.

Conclusion


The parallel Polyarc®/FID and MS system successfully achieves calibration-free quantification and reliable identification of unknown compounds in a single injection. The constant split ratio maintained by an EPC enables accurate dual-detector operation across temperature programs, streamlining gas chromatographic workflows and extending analytical capabilities.

References


No formal literature references were provided in the source document.

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