Separation of Hydrocarbons by Packed Column GC
Guides | 1995 | MerckInstrumentation
Gas chromatography using packed columns plays an essential role in petrochemical, environmental and industrial laboratory analyses. It enables rapid fingerprinting of hydrocarbon mixtures across a wide volatility range, from natural gases to microcrystalline waxes. Robust, versatile packed columns support trace-level detection, process monitoring and quality control in applications where capillary columns may not provide sufficient sample capacity or mechanical resistance.
This bulletin reviews the separation of hydrocarbons using packed GC columns, with focus on column materials, stationary phases, adsorbent supports and modified adsorbents. It summarizes classical gas–solid and gas–liquid/solid chromatographic categories, illustrates key column packings for aliphatic, aromatic and high-boiling fractions, and discusses selectivity enhancements through surface modifications and complexing agents.
Gas chromatographic separations were performed on packed stainless steel columns (1/8” ID) using a variety of stationary phases coated on supports such as silica gel, alumina, molecular sieves (Carbosieve™, Carboxen™), porous polymers and graphitized carbons (Carbopack™). Key phases include:
Packed columns offer large sample loads, robustness against contaminants and compatibility with industrial streams. They provide rapid qualitative/quantitative profiling for environmental monitoring of trace hydrocarbons, petrochemical QA/QC, impurity analysis in polymers and forensic fingerprinting. Modular support and phase combinations allow tailored selectivity for diverse targets, simplifying method development and maintenance.
Emerging directions include nanostructured adsorbents and hybrid phases for selective analysis of functionalized and heteroatom-containing hydrocarbons. Advances in high-temperature stable phases will expand boiling range coverage and column lifetime. Miniaturized packed and monolithic columns coupled with mass spectrometry will enhance sensitivity. Integration of chemometric tools and automated method optimization is expected to improve throughput and robustness in complex matrices.
Packed-column GC remains a versatile technique for hydrocarbon analysis across broad volatility and chemical diversity. Through careful selection of support, phase chemistry and temperature programming, analysts can achieve high resolution, large sample capacity and reliable performance for aliphatic, aromatic and heavy fractions. Continued phase innovations and instrument enhancements will further extend its utility in petrochemical, environmental and industrial laboratories.
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerMerck
Summary
Significance of the topic
Gas chromatography using packed columns plays an essential role in petrochemical, environmental and industrial laboratory analyses. It enables rapid fingerprinting of hydrocarbon mixtures across a wide volatility range, from natural gases to microcrystalline waxes. Robust, versatile packed columns support trace-level detection, process monitoring and quality control in applications where capillary columns may not provide sufficient sample capacity or mechanical resistance.
Study Objectives and Overview
This bulletin reviews the separation of hydrocarbons using packed GC columns, with focus on column materials, stationary phases, adsorbent supports and modified adsorbents. It summarizes classical gas–solid and gas–liquid/solid chromatographic categories, illustrates key column packings for aliphatic, aromatic and high-boiling fractions, and discusses selectivity enhancements through surface modifications and complexing agents.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Gas chromatographic separations were performed on packed stainless steel columns (1/8” ID) using a variety of stationary phases coated on supports such as silica gel, alumina, molecular sieves (Carbosieve™, Carboxen™), porous polymers and graphitized carbons (Carbopack™). Key phases include:
- SP-1700 (methyl silicone) for C1–C5 mixtures at 0–110 °C
- SP-2100 and SP-2250 (methyl and methyl-phenyl silicones) for C6–C16 and higher boiling aromatics
- Dexsil® 300 and BMBT for microcrystalline wax and polyaromatic separations at 175–350 °C
- TCEP, BC-120, BC-150, and Bentone® 34 for aromatic-aliphatic discrimination and xylene isomers
Main Results and Discussion
- C1–C3 separation on Carbosieve S-II/G and Carboxen-1000 shows elution by saturation order (acetylene, ethylene, ethane, propyne, propylene, propane).
- C4–C5 mixtures resolved on Carbopack C/picric acid achieve baseline separation of butadienes, butylbenzenes and pentanes in isothermal and programmed methods.
- SP-1700 (23% on Chromosorb P) provides large sample capacity and symmetrical peaks for C1–C6 streams at 70 °C, even at disparate concentration ratios.
- SP-2100 columns fingerprint gasoline and kerosene via programming from 75 to 200 °C, resolving C6–C16 aliphatics efficiently.
- SP-2250 and SP-2100/BMBT mixtures separate polyaromatic fractions (naphthalene to pyrene) under 100–300 °C programs.
- Polar phases (TCEP, BC-120, BC-150) delay aromatics relative to aliphatics, isolating benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and xylenes among C6–C10 paraffins.
- Bentone 34 complexed packings (SP-1200 or DIDP) effectively discriminate xylene isomers, styrene and propylbenzene isomers.
- Modified graphitized carbons extend selectivity for light gases and unsaturates, underscoring surface chemistry and phase loading effects.
Benefits and Practical Applications
Packed columns offer large sample loads, robustness against contaminants and compatibility with industrial streams. They provide rapid qualitative/quantitative profiling for environmental monitoring of trace hydrocarbons, petrochemical QA/QC, impurity analysis in polymers and forensic fingerprinting. Modular support and phase combinations allow tailored selectivity for diverse targets, simplifying method development and maintenance.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Emerging directions include nanostructured adsorbents and hybrid phases for selective analysis of functionalized and heteroatom-containing hydrocarbons. Advances in high-temperature stable phases will expand boiling range coverage and column lifetime. Miniaturized packed and monolithic columns coupled with mass spectrometry will enhance sensitivity. Integration of chemometric tools and automated method optimization is expected to improve throughput and robustness in complex matrices.
Conclusion
Packed-column GC remains a versatile technique for hydrocarbon analysis across broad volatility and chemical diversity. Through careful selection of support, phase chemistry and temperature programming, analysts can achieve high resolution, large sample capacity and reliable performance for aliphatic, aromatic and heavy fractions. Continued phase innovations and instrument enhancements will further extend its utility in petrochemical, environmental and industrial laboratories.
References
- Green, S.A. and Pust, H., Anal. Chem., 29, 1055 (1957).
- Supelco Bulletins 712, 740, 743, 755, 780.
- Bruner, F. et al., Anal. Chem., 45, 1851 (1973).
- Di Corcia, A. and Samperi, R., Anal. Chem., 45, 1228; 47, 1853 (1973-1975).
- Eggertsen, F.T. et al., Anal. Chem., 28, 303 (1956).
- Mortimer, J.V. and Gent, P.L., Nature, 197, 789 (1963).
- Spencer, S., Anal. Chem., 35, 592 (1963).
- Altgelt, K.H. and Gouw, T.H., Adv. Chromatogr., 13 (1975).
- Janini, G.M. et al., Anal. Chem., 47, 670 (1975).
- Sanders, W.N. and Maynard, J.B., Anal. Chem., 40, 527 (1968).
- Sander, W.N. and Maynard, J.B., J. Chromatog. Sci., 7, 177 (1968).
Used Instrumentation
- Gas chromatograph with packed stainless steel columns (1/8” ID).
- Detectors: Flame Ionization (FID), Thermal Conductivity (TCD), GC-MS interfaces.
- Oven temperature control from ambient to 350 °C with programming.
- Carrier gases: N₂, He, H₂ at 20–60 mL/min.
- Stationary phase packings: Carbopack™, Carbosieve™, Carboxen™, SP-1700, SP-2100, SP-2250, Dexsil 300, BMBT, Bentone 34.
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