Precise Time-Scaling of Gas Chromatographic Methods Using Method Translation and Retention Time Locking
Applications | 2006 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Gas chromatographic screening for pesticides and suspected endocrine disruptors demands precise retention times across different instruments and detectors. Method translation combined with retention time locking (RTL) enables exact time-scaling, extending the utility of established methods, minimizing redevelopment, and improving confidence in compound identification.
This application describes how to adapt the Agilent RTL Pesticide Library method for various GC configurations (GC-AED, GC-MS, micro-ECD) and chromatographic speeds. The primary aims are to maintain retention time fidelity when transferring methods, enable comprehensive elemental screening, and streamline method translation between different instrument types.
Method translation paired with retention time locking offers a flexible and robust approach to precise time-scaling of GC methods across instrument platforms and speed requirements. This strategy maximizes method reuse, reduces development time, and maintains high confidence in chromatographic identification.
GC, GC/MSD
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Gas chromatographic screening for pesticides and suspected endocrine disruptors demands precise retention times across different instruments and detectors. Method translation combined with retention time locking (RTL) enables exact time-scaling, extending the utility of established methods, minimizing redevelopment, and improving confidence in compound identification.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application describes how to adapt the Agilent RTL Pesticide Library method for various GC configurations (GC-AED, GC-MS, micro-ECD) and chromatographic speeds. The primary aims are to maintain retention time fidelity when transferring methods, enable comprehensive elemental screening, and streamline method translation between different instrument types.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Instrumentation:
- Agilent 6890 GC with electronic pneumatic control and autosampler
- GC-AED with atomic emission detector for element-selective screening
- GC-MS (Agilent 5973 MSD) retention-time locked for confirmation
- GC-micro-ECD (10 m×0.1 mm id×0.1 μm) for highly sensitive chlorine detection
- Columns: 30 m×0.25 mm×0.25 μm HP-5MS; 10 m×0.1 mm×0.1 μm HP-5 for micro-ECD
- Method translation software calculates inlet pressure and oven ramp adjustments to achieve desired speed gains
- RTL uses a calibration of inlet pressure versus retention time for a reference standard (methyl chlorpyrifos) over ±20% pressure range with five runs
Main Results and Discussion
- Scaling from GC-AED to GC-MS (speed gain = 1) achieved retention time agreement within ±0.1 min over a 30 min window
- Threefold acceleration on GC-AED maintained elemental screening; RTL matching was within ±0.05 min
- Transfer to a 0.1 mm id column at 3× speed required adjustment of assumed column length for accurate RTL calibration; measured data yielded <0.005 min spread
- Element-selective detectors allowed rapid flagging of heteroatom-containing peaks, reducing false positives and negatives before MS confirmation
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Eliminates extensive method redevelopment when transferring between GC systems and detectors
- Allows laboratories to balance speed, resolution, and sensitivity based on sample needs
- Combines element-selective screening with MS confirmation under RTL for reliable peak identification and quantitation
Future Trends and Potential Uses
- Extension of method translation and RTL to additional analyte libraries and detectors
- Integration of automatic method translation and RTL into chromatography software platforms for adaptive, high-throughput workflows
- Broader application in food safety, environmental monitoring, and industrial quality control
Conclusion
Method translation paired with retention time locking offers a flexible and robust approach to precise time-scaling of GC methods across instrument platforms and speed requirements. This strategy maximizes method reuse, reduces development time, and maintains high confidence in chromatographic identification.
References
- Wylie PL, Quimby BD. A Method Used to Screen for 567 Pesticides and Suspected Endocrine Disrupters. Hewlett-Packard Application Note 228-402. 1998.
- Klee M, Giarrocco V. Predictable Translation of Capillary GC Methods for Fast GC. Hewlett-Packard Application Note 228-373. 1997.
- Giarrocco V, Quimby BD, Klee MS. Retention Time Locking: Concepts and Applications. Hewlett-Packard Application Note 228-392. 1997.
- Agilent Technologies. Capillary Column Method Translator Software. www.hp.com/go/mts. Accessed 1998.
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