Analysis of Active Compounds Using the New, Highly Inert HP-5MSi Column
Applications | 2004 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Gas chromatography analysis of highly active compounds such as polar pesticides and semivolatile phenols and amines often suffers from adsorption effects and peak tailing caused by active sites along the sample flow path and within the column itself. Lowering detector noise by reducing column bleed does not fully address losses in sensitivity and linearity when analytes interact with residual active sites. The development of a highly inert stationary phase is therefore critical for reliable quantitation at low nanogram levels in environmental and pesticide residue testing.
This study evaluates the performance of a newly developed HP-5MSi inert capillary column in combination with an Agilent 6890 GC and 5973 MSD system. The primary objectives were to assess column inertness using a stringent test mix, establish linearity for trace pesticides and environmental contaminants, and demonstrate the benefits of the new column in real-world sample analyses compared with a competitive low-bleed 5ms phase.
Test samples included a custom mix of acids, bases, and hydrocarbons designed to expose residual active sites. Pesticide standards covering common organochlorines and organophosphates were prepared over subnanogram to tens of nanogram ranges. Semivolatile phenols and amines were tested at trace levels. Chromatographic conditions featured on-column injection and both hydrogen and helium carrier gases, with retention time locking applied for pesticide screening. Linearity studies were performed using flame ionization detection and mass spectrometry.
Test Mix 1 revealed substantial reduction in peak tailing for acids and bases when using the HP-5MSi column versus the competitive phase. Total ion chromatograms of a 0.1 ng pesticide mixture showed clear, baseline separated peaks with high spectral match confidence and retention time locking. Calibration over 0.4 to 50 ng injected yielded relative standard deviations below 7 percent and correlation coefficients above 0.9997 for terbofos malathion endrin aldehyde and DDT on the inert phase compared with much higher RSD values on the competitive column. Semivolatile phenols and amines displayed excellent peak shape at 1 ng on column and linear response from 2.5 to 100 ng with RSDs in the 10 to 15 percent range for challenging analytes such as 2 4-dinitrophenol and pentachlorophenol.
Further developments may include expanded inert phase chemistries tailored to specific analyte classes and integration with high throughput and multidimensional GC techniques. Adoption of inert columns in routine QA QC and environmental monitoring can drive lower quantitation limits and more reliable screening workflows. Advanced detector technologies such as tandem mass spectrometry and atmospheric pressure interfaces will benefit from the reduced matrix effects enabled by highly inert stationary phases.
The HP-5MSi inert capillary column offers a significant enhancement in the analysis of active polar and semivolatile compounds by reducing adsorption and peak tailing. Its low bleed characteristics combined with comprehensive deactivation deliver superior linearity precision and sensitivity for trace pesticide and environmental contaminant screening when compared with existing low-bleed 5ms columns.
GC/MSD, GC/SQ, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Gas chromatography analysis of highly active compounds such as polar pesticides and semivolatile phenols and amines often suffers from adsorption effects and peak tailing caused by active sites along the sample flow path and within the column itself. Lowering detector noise by reducing column bleed does not fully address losses in sensitivity and linearity when analytes interact with residual active sites. The development of a highly inert stationary phase is therefore critical for reliable quantitation at low nanogram levels in environmental and pesticide residue testing.
Aims and Overview of the Article
This study evaluates the performance of a newly developed HP-5MSi inert capillary column in combination with an Agilent 6890 GC and 5973 MSD system. The primary objectives were to assess column inertness using a stringent test mix, establish linearity for trace pesticides and environmental contaminants, and demonstrate the benefits of the new column in real-world sample analyses compared with a competitive low-bleed 5ms phase.
Methodology
Test samples included a custom mix of acids, bases, and hydrocarbons designed to expose residual active sites. Pesticide standards covering common organochlorines and organophosphates were prepared over subnanogram to tens of nanogram ranges. Semivolatile phenols and amines were tested at trace levels. Chromatographic conditions featured on-column injection and both hydrogen and helium carrier gases, with retention time locking applied for pesticide screening. Linearity studies were performed using flame ionization detection and mass spectrometry.
Used Instrumentation
- Agilent 6890 gas chromatograph equipped with on-column injector
- Agilent 5973 mass selective detector operated in scan mode from 50 to 500 amu
- Flame ionization detector set at 320 °C
- HP-5MSi capillary column 30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm
- Competitive low-bleed 5ms column for comparison
- Retention time locking software with a pesticide database
Main Results and Discussion
Test Mix 1 revealed substantial reduction in peak tailing for acids and bases when using the HP-5MSi column versus the competitive phase. Total ion chromatograms of a 0.1 ng pesticide mixture showed clear, baseline separated peaks with high spectral match confidence and retention time locking. Calibration over 0.4 to 50 ng injected yielded relative standard deviations below 7 percent and correlation coefficients above 0.9997 for terbofos malathion endrin aldehyde and DDT on the inert phase compared with much higher RSD values on the competitive column. Semivolatile phenols and amines displayed excellent peak shape at 1 ng on column and linear response from 2.5 to 100 ng with RSDs in the 10 to 15 percent range for challenging analytes such as 2 4-dinitrophenol and pentachlorophenol.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Minimized adsorption and peak tailing for polar analytes enabling lower detection limits
- Improved calibration linearity and precision for environmental contaminants and pesticides
- Compatibility with standard GC injection techniques and detectors including MSD and FID
- Simplified method development through reduced need for extensive deactivation of liners and inlet components
Future Trends and Opportunities
Further developments may include expanded inert phase chemistries tailored to specific analyte classes and integration with high throughput and multidimensional GC techniques. Adoption of inert columns in routine QA QC and environmental monitoring can drive lower quantitation limits and more reliable screening workflows. Advanced detector technologies such as tandem mass spectrometry and atmospheric pressure interfaces will benefit from the reduced matrix effects enabled by highly inert stationary phases.
Conclusion
The HP-5MSi inert capillary column offers a significant enhancement in the analysis of active polar and semivolatile compounds by reducing adsorption and peak tailing. Its low bleed characteristics combined with comprehensive deactivation deliver superior linearity precision and sensitivity for trace pesticide and environmental contaminant screening when compared with existing low-bleed 5ms columns.
References
- P Wylie M Szelewski C K Meng and C Sandy Comprehensive Pesticide Screening by GC MSD using Deconvolution Reporting Software Agilent Technologies publication 5989-1157EN
- M Szelewski W Wilson and P Perkins Improvements in the Agilent 6890 5973 GC MSD System for Use with USEPA Method 8270 Agilent Technologies publication 5968-3072EN
- F Feyerherm and H Prest Fast GC MSD Method for Routine Drug Analysis Agilent Technologies publication 5868-4780E
- M Szelewski Fast USEPA 8270 Semivolatiles Analysis Using the 6890 5973 inert GC MSD with Performance Electronics Agilent Technologies publication 5989-1510EN
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