Amines, C1 – C2 - Analysis of trace amines
Applications | 2011 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Amines, especially low molecular weight volatile C1–C2 species such as ammonia and methylamines, are important analytes in environmental monitoring, industrial process control and food safety. Their strong basicity and volatility make them challenging to retain and detect at trace levels using conventional GC stationary phases, demanding specialized column chemistries and detection techniques.
This application note demonstrates a robust gas chromatographic method for the analysis of trace-level C1–C2 amines. The study evaluates the retention, peak shape and detection limits achieved with a porous polymer PoraPLOT column tailored for amines, and illustrates quantitative performance down to the nanogram range.
The analytical method combines on-column injection with an electrolytic conductivity detector (ELD) and a hydrogen carrier gas. Key parameters include:
For applications requiring simultaneous measurement of amines, alcohols or water, an alternative 5 μm film CP-Sil 5 CB column operated around 30 °C is recommended.
The porous polymer column provided strong retention and inertness for all target amines. Sharp, well-resolved peaks were achieved at nanogram levels:
High retention prevented early elution and coelution issues common with siloxane phases, while ELD delivered sensitive, selective detection.
Advances in polymeric and ionic liquid column chemistries may further enhance selectivity for amines and related nitrogenous compounds. Coupling with mass spectrometry or advanced detector arrays could expand multiplexed analysis in complex matrices. Development of automated sample preparation and headspace techniques will streamline routine monitoring.
This application note validates the use of an Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines column combined with ELD for reliable trace analysis of C1–C2 amines. The method achieves sharp peaks, high sensitivity and reproducible quantitation at nanogram levels, offering a practical solution for laboratories tackling volatile basic analytes in challenging matrices.
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Amines, especially low molecular weight volatile C1–C2 species such as ammonia and methylamines, are important analytes in environmental monitoring, industrial process control and food safety. Their strong basicity and volatility make them challenging to retain and detect at trace levels using conventional GC stationary phases, demanding specialized column chemistries and detection techniques.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note demonstrates a robust gas chromatographic method for the analysis of trace-level C1–C2 amines. The study evaluates the retention, peak shape and detection limits achieved with a porous polymer PoraPLOT column tailored for amines, and illustrates quantitative performance down to the nanogram range.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
The analytical method combines on-column injection with an electrolytic conductivity detector (ELD) and a hydrogen carrier gas. Key parameters include:
- Column: Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines, 0.32 mm × 25 m, df = 10 μm porous polymer capillary (Part no. CP7591)
- Temperature program: 140 °C hold for 2 min, ramp at 10 °C/min to 250 °C
- Carrier gas: H₂ at 95 kPa (0.95 bar)
- Injector configuration: on-column
- Detector: electrolytic conductivity detector (ELD)
- Sample volume: 0.1 μL liquid injection
For applications requiring simultaneous measurement of amines, alcohols or water, an alternative 5 μm film CP-Sil 5 CB column operated around 30 °C is recommended.
Main Results and Discussion
The porous polymer column provided strong retention and inertness for all target amines. Sharp, well-resolved peaks were achieved at nanogram levels:
- Ammonia: 1.8 ng
- Methylamine: 3.4 ng
- Dimethylamine: 2.9 ng
- Trimethylamine: 2.9 ng
- Ethylamine: 3.4 ng
High retention prevented early elution and coelution issues common with siloxane phases, while ELD delivered sensitive, selective detection.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High inertness minimizes adsorption and peak tailing of basic compounds
- Porous polymer matrix offers strong retention of highly volatile amines
- Nanogram-level detection supports trace analysis in environmental, industrial and food matrices
- On-column injection avoids sample discrimination and thermal decomposition
Future Trends and Applications
Advances in polymeric and ionic liquid column chemistries may further enhance selectivity for amines and related nitrogenous compounds. Coupling with mass spectrometry or advanced detector arrays could expand multiplexed analysis in complex matrices. Development of automated sample preparation and headspace techniques will streamline routine monitoring.
Conclusion
This application note validates the use of an Agilent PoraPLOT for Amines column combined with ELD for reliable trace analysis of C1–C2 amines. The method achieves sharp peaks, high sensitivity and reproducible quantitation at nanogram levels, offering a practical solution for laboratories tackling volatile basic analytes in challenging matrices.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Amines, C1 – C2 - Analysis of impurities in dimethylamine
2013|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Amines, C1 – C2 Analysis of impurities in dimethylamine Application Note Materials Testing & Research Authors Introduction Agilent Technologies, Inc. Amines are difficult to analyze due to their strong basic nature. Capillary columns must be base-modified to elute amines with…
Key words
dimethylamine, dimethylamineethylamine, ethylaminemethylamine, methylaminetrimethylamine, trimethylamineamines, aminesimpurity, impurityelute, eluteunknown, unknownmakes, makesimpurities, impuritiesprinted, printedvolatile, volatileinjector, injectorresearch, researchusa
Separation of Volatile Organic Hydrocarbons with Agilent J&W PLOT GC Columns and Selectivity Tuning
2021|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note Energy and Chemicals Separation of Volatile Organic Hydrocarbons with Agilent J&W PLOT GC Columns and Selectivity Tuning Authors Neige Rudi, Yujuan Hua, Ronda Gras, Guangyu Liu, and Jim Luong Dow Chemical Canada, Analytical Science, Core R&D Fort Saskatchewan,…
Key words
poraplot, poraplotporabond, porabondporous, porouscolumn, columncolumns, columnsmin, minacetylene, acetylenedivinylbenzene, divinylbenzenetuning, tuningpolymer, polymerstationary, stationaryselectivity, selectivityphases, phasesseparation, separationtime
C1 – C3 amines
2011|Agilent Technologies|Applications
C1 – C3 amines Application Note Environmental Authors Introduction Agilent Technologies, Inc. Agilent CP-Volamine elutes volatile amines as symmetrical peaks. Besides the volatile amines, the CP-Volamine also elutes low levels of alcohols that are often seen as by-products. In addition,…
Key words
methylamine, methylaminetma, tmamma, mmadma, dmatri, trimono, monoamine, aminecourtesy, courtesybelgium, belgiummixtures, mixturestherefore, thereforeaqueous, aqueousprinted, printedinjections, injectionsinjector
Ammonia Analysis Using the Agilent 990 Micro GC
2021|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note Energy and Chemicals Ammonia Analysis Using the Agilent 990 Micro GC Author Sheng Geng Agilent Technologies, Inc. (Shanghai) Co. Ltd. Shanghai 200131 P. R. China Abstract The Agilent 990 Micro GC with the Agilent J&W CP-Volamine column is…
Key words
ammonia, ammoniarsd, rsdmonths, monthstime, timeminutes, minutesarea, arearetention, retentiongeng, gengbalance, balancecontaining, containingconcentration, concentrationmpd, mpdsheng, shengpath, pathvolamine