Amines, C1 – C2 - Analysis of impurities in dimethylamine
Applications | 2013 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Amines such as methylamine, dimethylamine and ethylamine are critical volatile impurities in many industrial and pharmaceutical products. Their strong basicity and high volatility pose analytical challenges, making accurate determination essential for quality control, safety and regulatory compliance.
This application demonstrates a capillary gas chromatography method coupled with flame ionization detection to separate and quantify C1 and C2 amines present as impurities in dimethylamine. The goal is to achieve clear resolution and reliable quantification at low parts-per-million levels.
Samples of dimethylamine spiked with target amines at concentrations between 10 and 100 ppm were injected (0.2 μL) in split mode. The GC oven was programmed from 110 °C (8 min hold) to 250 °C at 15 °C/min, using hydrogen at 95 kPa as carrier gas to ensure sharp peaks and rapid analysis.
The porous polymer column provided high retention and inertness for volatile amines, enabling baseline separation of methylamine, an unknown impurity, dimethylamine, trimethylamine and ethylamine. Elevated operating temperatures reduced peak tailing and allowed precise quantification across the tested concentration range with good repeatability.
Coupling this methodology with mass spectrometry would improve identification of unknown amines. Advances in stationary-phase chemistry may allow simultaneous analysis of amines, alcohols and water. Integration of automated sampling and data processing can enhance throughput in continuous manufacturing environments.
The presented GC-FID method using an Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines column delivers reliable separation and quantification of C1–C2 amine impurities in dimethylamine, fulfilling modern analytical requirements for sensitivity, accuracy and reproducibility.
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the topic
Amines such as methylamine, dimethylamine and ethylamine are critical volatile impurities in many industrial and pharmaceutical products. Their strong basicity and high volatility pose analytical challenges, making accurate determination essential for quality control, safety and regulatory compliance.
Objectives and Overview
This application demonstrates a capillary gas chromatography method coupled with flame ionization detection to separate and quantify C1 and C2 amines present as impurities in dimethylamine. The goal is to achieve clear resolution and reliable quantification at low parts-per-million levels.
Methodology
Samples of dimethylamine spiked with target amines at concentrations between 10 and 100 ppm were injected (0.2 μL) in split mode. The GC oven was programmed from 110 °C (8 min hold) to 250 °C at 15 °C/min, using hydrogen at 95 kPa as carrier gas to ensure sharp peaks and rapid analysis.
Used Instrumentation
- Gas chromatograph with capillary inlet and FID detector
- Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines column, 0.32 mm × 25 m, df = 10 μm
- Carrier gas: H₂ at 95 kPa
- Injector temperature: 250 °C (split mode)
- Detector temperature: 250 °C (FID)
Main Results and Discussion
The porous polymer column provided high retention and inertness for volatile amines, enabling baseline separation of methylamine, an unknown impurity, dimethylamine, trimethylamine and ethylamine. Elevated operating temperatures reduced peak tailing and allowed precise quantification across the tested concentration range with good repeatability.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High sensitivity and selectivity for small, volatile amines
- Robust performance over a broad temperature range
- Minimal sample preparation supports routine QA/QC workflows
- Applicable to pharmaceutical, environmental and industrial impurity profiling
Future Trends and Possibilities
Coupling this methodology with mass spectrometry would improve identification of unknown amines. Advances in stationary-phase chemistry may allow simultaneous analysis of amines, alcohols and water. Integration of automated sampling and data processing can enhance throughput in continuous manufacturing environments.
Conclusion
The presented GC-FID method using an Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines column delivers reliable separation and quantification of C1–C2 amine impurities in dimethylamine, fulfilling modern analytical requirements for sensitivity, accuracy and reproducibility.
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