Abstract

The use of water as a carrier gas in capillary gas chromatography has been considered. Steam and helium have been compared as a mobile phase for separation of alkanes (using the example of chromatograms of diesel fuel) and polyaromatic compounds (SE-30 and HP-5 capillary columns). Steam has been shown to have an advantage. The peak resolution values calculated for the pair of C18/iso-C20 compounds are 4.4 for steam and 3.9 for helium. The Van Deemter relations have been measured and it has been shown that a significantly lower viscosity of steam compared to helium allows for analysis of substances in a wide range of linear velocities with good selectivity. Steam has been shown to hold promise for chromatographic determination of hydrocarbons.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call