Chromatography in the Fast Lane - Fast GC
Presentations | 2018 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Fast gas chromatography (GC) methods are increasingly critical for laboratories seeking rapid, high-resolution separations without sacrificing analytical performance. Accelerating GC run times supports higher sample throughput, lowers operational costs, and enables timely decision-making in quality control, environmental monitoring, food analysis, and forensic testing.
This application note evaluates key parameters and strategies to reduce GC analysis time while maintaining or improving resolution. It summarizes variable effects on chromatographic efficiency, retention, and selectivity. Several method translation case studies demonstrate how column dimensions, carrier gases, temperature programs, and instrument hardware can be optimized to achieve sub-10-minute separations for complex mixtures, including pesticides and essential oils.
Method optimization focused on five main variables:
Method translation software was used to adapt existing GC methods to new column/gas configurations, preserving elution profiles while accelerating analysis.
Shortening column length reduces analysis time but also lowers theoretical plates (efficiency), resolution, backpressure, and cost. Decreasing internal diameter enhances efficiency and resolution but limits sample capacity and increases pressure. Hydrogen provides higher optimal linear velocity than helium, enabling faster separations without significant resolution loss. Temperature ramping and flow ramping further compress run times for late-eluting compounds. In case studies, translating a 0.32 mm helium-based pesticide method to a 0.18 mm hydrogen configuration cut run time by over 30% while preserving resolution. Spearmint oil separations on hydrogen at 0.18 mm I.D. demonstrated a 61% speed gain with maintained peak spacing.
Advances in GC technology will continue to support ultrafast separations through novel stationary phases, micro-fabricated columns, and integrated flow control. Expanded use of hydrogen as carrier gas, coupled with artificial-intelligence-driven method development, promises further runtime reductions. High-speed detectors and data systems will enable reliable quantitation of sub-second peaks. On-line coupling with mass spectrometry and ambient sampling tools will broaden fast GC applications in real-time process monitoring and field analysis.
Fast GC is attainable by systematic optimization of column dimensions, carrier gas, temperature and flow programming, and detector electronics. Method translation software and modern GC platforms like the Intuvo 9000 simplify implementation and maintenance. Laboratories can achieve significant time savings and cost reductions without sacrificing analytical quality.
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Fast gas chromatography (GC) methods are increasingly critical for laboratories seeking rapid, high-resolution separations without sacrificing analytical performance. Accelerating GC run times supports higher sample throughput, lowers operational costs, and enables timely decision-making in quality control, environmental monitoring, food analysis, and forensic testing.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note evaluates key parameters and strategies to reduce GC analysis time while maintaining or improving resolution. It summarizes variable effects on chromatographic efficiency, retention, and selectivity. Several method translation case studies demonstrate how column dimensions, carrier gases, temperature programs, and instrument hardware can be optimized to achieve sub-10-minute separations for complex mixtures, including pesticides and essential oils.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Method optimization focused on five main variables:
- Stationary phase chemistry (non-polar siloxanes, polar PEGs, porous polymers)
- Column geometry (length, internal diameter, film thickness)
- Carrier gas type and linear velocity (helium vs. hydrogen)
- Temperature programming (ramp rates, hold times)
- Detector data acquisition rate (high-frequency FID electronics)
Method translation software was used to adapt existing GC methods to new column/gas configurations, preserving elution profiles while accelerating analysis.
Instrumentation
- Agilent 6890 GC with high-speed FID (up to 200 Hz data rate)
- µ-ECD detector for electron capture applications
- Capillary columns: DB-1, DB-5, DB-WAX, DB-624, DB-XLB, DB-17ms, Intuvo planar columns
- Carrier gases: helium and hydrogen with electronic pressure control (EPC) and flow ramp capability
- Intuvo 9000 GC system with click-and-run guard chips and planar column technology
Main Results and Discussion
Shortening column length reduces analysis time but also lowers theoretical plates (efficiency), resolution, backpressure, and cost. Decreasing internal diameter enhances efficiency and resolution but limits sample capacity and increases pressure. Hydrogen provides higher optimal linear velocity than helium, enabling faster separations without significant resolution loss. Temperature ramping and flow ramping further compress run times for late-eluting compounds. In case studies, translating a 0.32 mm helium-based pesticide method to a 0.18 mm hydrogen configuration cut run time by over 30% while preserving resolution. Spearmint oil separations on hydrogen at 0.18 mm I.D. demonstrated a 61% speed gain with maintained peak spacing.
Practical Benefits and Applications
- Higher sample throughput and reduced cycle times in QA/QC and environmental labs
- Lower carrier gas and column costs through shorter runs and smaller columns
- Maintained or improved resolution for critical analytes
- Enhanced method flexibility via software-assisted translation between instruments and conditions
- Simplified maintenance with Intuvo system and planar columns, reducing downtime
Future Trends and Applications
Advances in GC technology will continue to support ultrafast separations through novel stationary phases, micro-fabricated columns, and integrated flow control. Expanded use of hydrogen as carrier gas, coupled with artificial-intelligence-driven method development, promises further runtime reductions. High-speed detectors and data systems will enable reliable quantitation of sub-second peaks. On-line coupling with mass spectrometry and ambient sampling tools will broaden fast GC applications in real-time process monitoring and field analysis.
Conclusion
Fast GC is attainable by systematic optimization of column dimensions, carrier gas, temperature and flow programming, and detector electronics. Method translation software and modern GC platforms like the Intuvo 9000 simplify implementation and maintenance. Laboratories can achieve significant time savings and cost reductions without sacrificing analytical quality.
References
- Sinnott M. Chromatography in the Fast Lane: Fast GC. Agilent Technologies Application Note, December 13, 2018.
- Practical Fast GC Applications with Capillary GC Columns. Agilent Technologies Application Note, May 19, 2009.
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