Abstract

The correlation of retention times in comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography caused by correlation of enthalpy and entropy changes between two stationary phases, methylsilicone and poly(ethylene glycol), was examined using commercial GC software and in-house Monte Carlo simulation. The enthalpy change, deltaH0, and entropy change, deltaS0, of 93 compounds were predicted from isothermal one-dimensional gas chromatograms predicted by the software. These values then were mimicked by Monte Carlo simulation, which removed the strong correlation of deltaH0 and modest correlation of deltaS0 between the two phases. Retention times in a comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatogram (GC x GC) and in simulations of it were predicted for typical dual-capillary temperature-programmed conditions using the actual, correlated values of deltaH0 and deltaS0 and their uncorrelated Monte Carlo counterparts, respectively. The uncorrelated deltaH0 and deltaS0 values caused the retention-time range of the simulations' second dimension to expand substantially beyond that in the GC x GC. Other simulations were developed using a restricted range of uncorrelated deltaH0 and deltaS0 values to mimic more closely the retention-time range of the GC x GC's second dimension. The intervals between nearest neighbor retention-time coordinates were calculated in both the latter simulations and the GC x GC. The intervals were larger in the simulations than in the GC x GC because the former contained uncorrelated coordinates and the latter contained correlated ones, which clustered along or near the diagonal. The retention times in the first dimension of the GC x GC were Poisson distributed, as assessed by statistical-overlap theory. In contrast, the two-dimensional reduced retention-time coordinates in the GC x GC were not Poisson distributed, because retention times were correlated. However, the reduced retention-time coordinates in the simulations were Poisson distributed.

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