Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography

Gas chromatography (GC) is an analytical chemistry tool used to determine the chemical composition of a gas sample by separating sample analytes as they travel through a GC column. Recent efforts have been made to understand and control gas chromatography separations with a negative thermal gradient...

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Main Author: Avila, Samuel
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8778
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9787&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-97872021-09-24T05:00:49Z Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography Avila, Samuel Gas chromatography (GC) is an analytical chemistry tool used to determine the chemical composition of a gas sample by separating sample analytes as they travel through a GC column. Recent efforts have been made to understand and control gas chromatography separations with a negative thermal gradient on the column. The present work presents results from thermal gradient GC separations on two GC columns in different configurations (serpentine and radial) in a stainless-steel plate. Methods to fabricate the GC systems capable of isothermal, temperature programmed and thermal gradient separations are presented. Isothermal experimental data from the serpentine column were used to fit retention and dispersion parameters in a transport model that simulates GC separation for hydrocarbons C12-C14. Transport model simulated retention times and peak widths matched experimental values well for isothermal, temperature programmed and thermal gradient separations. The validated transport model was used to study the effect of static (not varying temporally) thermal gradients on GC separations with varying injection widths, injection band shapes and stationary phase thickness. Resolution results from different heating conditions were considered comparable if retention times for each analyte were within 5%. An optimal, static thermal gradient is shown to reduce analyte band spreading from axially-varying velocity gradients with resolution improvements over isothermal separations of up to 8% for analytes with similar retention factors. Static thermal gradients have a larger effect on fronting peak shape than tailing peak shape. Stationary phase distribution acts similar to a velocity gradient and can be corrected by a thermal gradient. Another transport model was created from isothermal experimental data on a commercial column for hydrocarbons C12-C20. An optimal, static thermal gradient does not improve resolution for all analyte pairs. An optimal, dynamic (varying tempo-rally) thermal gradient is created by uniformly increasing the temperature on an optimal, static thermal gradient. Improvements in resolution of up to 20% are achievable over temperature programmed GC separation. A dynamic thermal gradient can also correct for a poor sample injection by creating a temperature trap at the beginning of the column. 2021-01-07T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8778 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9787&context=etd https://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive thermal gradient gas chromatography transport model injection width modeling tailing peak modeling fronting peak modeling stationary phase thickness stationary phase distribution random walk spatially varying temporally varying Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic thermal gradient
gas chromatography
transport model
injection width modeling
tailing peak modeling
fronting peak modeling
stationary phase thickness
stationary phase distribution
random walk
spatially varying
temporally varying
Engineering
spellingShingle thermal gradient
gas chromatography
transport model
injection width modeling
tailing peak modeling
fronting peak modeling
stationary phase thickness
stationary phase distribution
random walk
spatially varying
temporally varying
Engineering
Avila, Samuel
Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
description Gas chromatography (GC) is an analytical chemistry tool used to determine the chemical composition of a gas sample by separating sample analytes as they travel through a GC column. Recent efforts have been made to understand and control gas chromatography separations with a negative thermal gradient on the column. The present work presents results from thermal gradient GC separations on two GC columns in different configurations (serpentine and radial) in a stainless-steel plate. Methods to fabricate the GC systems capable of isothermal, temperature programmed and thermal gradient separations are presented. Isothermal experimental data from the serpentine column were used to fit retention and dispersion parameters in a transport model that simulates GC separation for hydrocarbons C12-C14. Transport model simulated retention times and peak widths matched experimental values well for isothermal, temperature programmed and thermal gradient separations. The validated transport model was used to study the effect of static (not varying temporally) thermal gradients on GC separations with varying injection widths, injection band shapes and stationary phase thickness. Resolution results from different heating conditions were considered comparable if retention times for each analyte were within 5%. An optimal, static thermal gradient is shown to reduce analyte band spreading from axially-varying velocity gradients with resolution improvements over isothermal separations of up to 8% for analytes with similar retention factors. Static thermal gradients have a larger effect on fronting peak shape than tailing peak shape. Stationary phase distribution acts similar to a velocity gradient and can be corrected by a thermal gradient. Another transport model was created from isothermal experimental data on a commercial column for hydrocarbons C12-C20. An optimal, static thermal gradient does not improve resolution for all analyte pairs. An optimal, dynamic (varying tempo-rally) thermal gradient is created by uniformly increasing the temperature on an optimal, static thermal gradient. Improvements in resolution of up to 20% are achievable over temperature programmed GC separation. A dynamic thermal gradient can also correct for a poor sample injection by creating a temperature trap at the beginning of the column.
author Avila, Samuel
author_facet Avila, Samuel
author_sort Avila, Samuel
title Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
title_short Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
title_full Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
title_fullStr Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Static and Dynamic Thermal Gradients in Gas Chromatography
title_sort effects of static and dynamic thermal gradients in gas chromatography
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2021
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8778
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=9787&context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT avilasamuel effectsofstaticanddynamicthermalgradientsingaschromatography
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