Chemical Analysis. Francis Rouessac
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Название: Chemical Analysis

Автор: Francis Rouessac

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Химия

Серия:

isbn: 9781119701347

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ Chemie, 55, 66–70. https://doi.org/10.1002/bbpc.19510550115. (b): Courtesy of Supelco.)

      For organic compounds, the intensity of the signal is sensitive to the mass flow of the sample, except in the presence of heteroelements, such as halogens. The latter may change the response and several simple compounds, such as water, carbon dioxide or ammonia, do not give any response. Thus, the area under the peak reflects the mass m of the compound eluted (dm/dt integrated between the beginning and end of the peak). An FID detector is not affected by variations in flow rate, which can lead to errors with some types of detectors. The sensitivity of this detector is expressed in Coulombs/g of carbon, and the dead volume of the detector is null. The detection limit is in the order of 2 or 3 pg/s, and the linear dynamic range reaches 108; however, concentrated solutions do not lead to the best resolution.

      To evaluate the overall quantity of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in polluted air, there exist small portable instruments housing a flame ionization detector that allows the measurement of the carbon factor of the atmosphere examined, without prior chromatographic separation.

Schematic illustration of thermal conductivity detector.

      Thermal conductivity detector (TCD)

      Its operating principle is based on the thermal conductivity of gas mixtures as a function of their composition. The main part of this detector is the katharometer, a thermostatted metal unit that is brought to a temperature slightly higher than that of the column and which includes thermistors located in tiny cavities. In the given example, the katharometer includes four thermistors, placed two‐by‐two and fed as indicated either with carrier gas sourced upstream from the injector or with the mobile phase downstream from the column. When a solute elutes, the conductivity of the mixture (carrier gas + compound) decreases with respect to that of the carrier gas alone. The thermal equilibrium is disrupted and this results in a variation in the resistance of one of the filaments, which is proportional to the concentration of the compound in the carrier gas. The dynamic range of this detector extends over some six orders of magnitude, and while its sensitivity is quite average (from ng to mg), it is being used more frequently thanks to the rise of micro‐GC (see Section 2.9.2).

      Mass spectrometry detector (MSD)

      

      2.7.2 Selective Detectors

      Nitrogen phosphorus detector (NPD)

      This specific detector is sensitive to nitrogen (N) or phosphorus (P) compounds. It comprises a small ceramic cylinder doped with an alkaline salt (e.g. rubidium sulfate). A voltage is applied to maintain a small plasma (800°C) through the combustion of an air/hydrogen mixture (Figure 2.12). Compared with FID, the flame is much smaller. Compounds containing nitrogen or phosphorus give, fairly specifically, decomposition fragments transformed into negative ions. These ions are then received by a collector electrode. The nitrogen present in air is inactive. Detector sensitivity is typically 0.1 pg/s for nitrogen‐ or phosphorus‐containing analytes, with a linear range of five orders of magnitude. However, it varies a lot with settings.

      Electron capture detector (ECD)

      This detector is considered to be selective because it is much more sensitive to halocarbon groups. A flow of nitrogen gas that has been ionized by electrons generated from a low‐energy β radioactive source (a few mCi of 63Ni) passes between two electrodes maintained at a potential differential of around 100 V (Figure 2.14). At rest, a base current I0 is generated, mainly due to free and very mobile electrons. If molecules (M) containing a halogen (F, Cl, Br) cross the zone between the two electrodes, they capture thermally excited electrons to form heavy negative ions, which by consequence are much less mobile.

StartLayout 1st Row upper N 2 right-arrow Overscript beta Superscript minus Baseline Endscripts upper N 2 Superscript plus Baseline plus e Superscript minus Baseline 2nd Row upper M plus e Superscript minus Baseline right-arrow upper M Superscript minus Baseline 3rd Row upper M Superscript minus Baseline plus upper N 2 Superscript plus Baseline right-arrow upper M plus upper N 2 EndLayout

      The measured intensity decreases exponentially by following a law of the type I = I0 exp[−kc]. The linear range is about four orders of magnitude with nitrogen as the make‐up gas. The presence of a radioactive source in this detector means that it is subject to special regulations (inspection, location and maintenance visits). This detector is often used for analyses of chlorinated pesticides and polychlorinated biphenyls.

Schematic illustration of (a) electron capture detector (ECD) and (b) photo-ionization detector (PID).

      Photo‐ionization СКАЧАТЬ