Abstract

The separation power of comprehensive three-dimensional gas chromatography (GC3) is substantially enhanced through proper selection of the phase volume ratio, β, of each column relative to each other on successive dimensions. Consideration and application of the ratio of phase volume ratios, βr, or β ratio, between successive dimensions has been a relatively un-studied approach to maximize separating power in comprehensive multidimensional GC instrument design. Herein, proper selection of βr in multidimensional GC is shown to control the elution temperature, Te, of analytes throughout a 40 min primary (1D) column separation, and thus better control width-at-base, W, on all three dimensions. Specifically, between the 1D and secondary (2D) columns, a βr of 0.45 was applied, and between the 2D and tertiary (3D) columns a βr of 1.0 was applied. A total ideal peak capacity of 30,600, or a peak capacity production of ~770 peaks/min, was accomplished with the GC3 instrument with the reconfigured parameters. Additionally, due to the complex nature of this three-dimensional data, a novel approach to “slicing” the chromatographic run into user-defined time intervals is shown. This novel way to view the data still elicits a traditional GC×GC chromatograms, but with the focus on 2D × 3D separations. Moreover, due to proper βr selection, every 2 s window (i.e. every 1D modulation period) is shown to have a peak capacity of ~50–100 for each 2D × 3D separation. This high overall peak capacity (30,600) and peak capacity per 1D modulation (~50–100), courtesy of proper column selection, is demonstrated to hold great promise to physically separate truly complex mixtures.

Full Text
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