GCMS
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike

Fast GC - Increase GC Speed Without Sacrificing Resolution

Brochures and specifications | 2015 | MerckInstrumentation
GC, GC columns, Consumables
Industries
Manufacturer
Merck

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Fast gas chromatography (Fast GC) addresses the growing demand for higher sample throughput in analytical laboratories by reducing analysis times without compromising chromatographic resolution. By applying a systematic set of six principles, practitioners can accelerate routine separations, decrease operational costs, and increase productivity across diverse fields including environmental testing, petrochemicals, food analysis, and clinical research.

Objectives and Study Overview


This work outlines the fundamental principles of Fast GC, demonstrates their application through both theoretical discussion and practical tutorial, and highlights real‐world examples spanning multiple industries. A detailed comparison between conventional and Fast GC methods is provided, illustrating how semivolatile compounds can be resolved in less than half the time of traditional methods.

Methodology and Instrumentation


The methodology centers on manipulating six key parameters:
  • Principles 1–3 (decrease analysis time): shorten column length, increase oven temperature ramp rates, and raise carrier gas linear velocity.
  • Principles 4–6 (regain or improve resolution): use narrower column internal diameters, switch to hydrogen as carrier gas, and employ lower stationary‐phase film thickness.

A typical Fast GC setup includes capillary columns such as SLB-5ms (5% phenyl polysiloxane), Equity-1 (non-polar), Omegawax (polar), or ionic liquid stationary phases. Detectors range from flame ionization (FID) to mass spectrometry (MSD). Carrier gases are helium for MSD compatibility or hydrogen for optimal speed and efficiency in FID and other detectors.

Key Results and Discussion


A representative GC/MS analysis of 80 semivolatiles demonstrated that conventional GC required approximately 20 minutes to achieve baseline resolution, whereas application of all six Fast GC principles reduced the run time to 8.5 minutes with equivalent or improved peak separation. A stepwise tutorial using a 16‐component PAH mixture further illustrated the effects of each principle on retention time, plate height, and resolution. Theoretical Golay and retention equations underpin these observations, showing how decreasing column radius and film thickness and optimizing carrier gas velocity lower plate height and enhance efficiency.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Fast GC offers multiple advantages:
  • Up to tenfold faster analysis times compared to conventional GC methods.
  • Higher sample throughput translates into reduced staffing and instrument costs.
  • Maintained or improved resolution ensures analytical quality is uncompromised.
  • Applicability across environmental, petrochemical, food, fragrance, cosmetic, and clinical assays without major hardware changes.

Published application notes cover over 22 methods, including US EPA protocols for volatile and semivolatile analyses, pesticide and PCB determinations, petroleum hydrocarbon profiling, fatty acid methyl ester separations, essential oil fingerprinting, and clinical biomarker assays.

Instrumentation Used


Key instrumental components include:
  • Capillary GC ovens capable of rapid temperature programming (up to 80 °C/min).
  • Fast GC columns with lengths from 5 to 20 m, internal diameters of 0.10–0.25 mm, and film thicknesses from 0.08 to 1.0 μm.
  • Carrier gases: hydrogen for lowest plate heights; helium for MSD compatibility.
  • Detectors: FID for hydrocarbon and volatile screening; ECD/NPD for halogenated and nitrogen/phosphorus compounds; MSD for full mass spectral identification.

Future Trends and Applications


Emerging directions in Fast GC include:
  • Greater adoption of hydrogen carrier gas to maximize speed and reduce helium reliance.
  • Integration with comprehensive two‐dimensional GC (GC×GC) for enhanced peak capacity.
  • Wider use of ionic liquid stationary phases for unique selectivity in complex mixtures.
  • Automation advances in sample introduction and data processing to further accelerate laboratory workflows.

Conclusion


Fast GC provides a robust framework for significantly reducing analysis times while preserving or enhancing chromatographic resolution. The systematic application of six interrelated principles enables laboratories across industries to increase throughput, lower costs, and maintain analytical performance using existing instrumentation and readily available capillary columns.

References


No specific literature references were provided in the source document.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Fast Gas Chromatography - Increase GC Speed Without Sacrificing Resolution
Fast Gas Chromatography Increase GC Speed Without Sacrificing Resolution The life science business of Merck operates as MilliporeSigma in the U.S. and Canada. Overview Shorter analysis times allow increased sample throughput, which translates to the completion of more runs per…
Key words
oven, ovencarrier, carrierliner, linermin, mingas, gasinjection, injectioncolumn, columnlimonene, limonenemethylene, methylenechloride, chloridesample, samplephthalate, phthalateterpinene, terpineneneral, neralpinene
GC Column Selection Guide - Ensuring Optimal Method Performance
GC Column Selection Guide Ensuring Optimal Method Performance The life science business of Merck operates as MilliporeSigma in the U.S. and Canada. Supelco® GC Capillary Columns There from the beginning - Manufacturing reliable and reproducible capillary columns for over 50…
Key words
programmed, programmedndicated, ndicatedcolumns, columnschiraldex, chiraldexvocol, vocolpolar, polarintuvo, intuvospb, spbphases, phasesplot, plotcolumn, columnscot, scotformat, formatchiral, chiralomegawax
GC Column Selection Guide
GC Column Selection Guide
2013|Merck|Guides
GC Column Selection Guide Achieve Optimal Method Performance Performance Reliability Service GC Column Selection Guide The History of Supelco and the Capillary Column Supelco began in 1966 in a tiny garage in a small central Pennsylvania (USA) town manufacturing packed…
Key words
polar, polarchiraldex, chiraldexvocol, vocolcolumns, columnscolumn, columnplot, plotguide, guidespb, spbprogrammed, programmedscot, scotnukol, nukolselection, selectionchiral, chiralnon, nonderivatives
Equity™ Capillary GC Columns
Equity™ Capillary GC Columns
2003|Merck|Brochures and specifications
SUPELCO EQUITY CAPILLARY GC COLUMNS Equity™ Capillary GC Columns The performance you demand... the service you deserve... from the company you trust. Updated with: ● NEW Equity-1701 columns ● New Applications 1 sigma-aldrich.com/supelco SUPELCO EQUITY CAPILLARY GC COLUMNS The performance…
Key words
equity, equitysupelco, supelcocapillary, capillarymin, mincolumns, columnscapseal, capsealexcellent, excellentbullet, bulletbleed, bleedresponse, responseshapes, shapesacetate, acetatemethyl, methylendosulfan, endosulfanbhc
Other projects
LCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
FacebookX (Twitter)LinkedInYouTube
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike