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Topic History of: LC Services Ltd - Welcome you to our forum
Max. showing the last 6 posts - (Last post first)
Author Message
Dr. Chris Duffell I am currently developing a new hydrogen
generator for use as a carrier gas in GC's.
Due to the nature of the system there is a
pressure cycle as the cell tops up the
delivery pressure for the required flowrate.
I was wondering if any GC users could let me
know what the maximum acceptable pressure
variation would be per cycle, i.e. +/- 5psi??


Thanks,
Summer I am using the LaChrom D-7000HPLC Machine
System and I use the autosampler instead of
the manual injection. Does the Autosampler
have a separate column since I cannot figure
out how is the autosampler connected to the
Column Oven. Thanks for helping.
sheyna yang May I ask what happened to my LC? No matter
what I injected, and no matter what mobile
phase I used on the RP HPLC (waters), I only
got some peaks between 1 to 2 mins,and they
might change height with concentration. No
other peaks could be seen.
NIck Bayliss Having once worked for Gelman Sciences( jost
recently known as Pal Gelman) in filtration -
and also Merck ( eurolab, VWR, or what ever
they're deciding to call their chemical
division nowadays.. )I fully agree with
Harvey's last comment - \"never trust HPLC
grade chemicals..\"

Gelman Science produced a clever product
called the SOLVAC - don't know if it's still
available-but it was made of Reusable,
chemically resistant polypropylene. Resistant
to common HPLC mobile phase solvents such as
methanol, acetonitrile, and
tetrahydrofuran.It's trick was to Draw
directly from HPLC solvent bottle. Replacing
traditional pour-and-wait filtration when
filtering large volumes. Less likely to spill
aggressive solvents than glass funnels or
disposable cups and indeed less likely to
break than glass funnels...
Filters were set within a simple magnetic
seal enabling ANY-GH Polypro, PTFE, Nylon,
and PVDF standard 47mm filter to be used..and
replaced..
Offering a large effective filtration area-
it's claim was not only to degass but to
filter - >
Harvey G. am a user of columns. I agree completely with
Gerhard. When I first started performing HPLC
determinations, 30 years ago, I was included
in a group of 4, none of us knowing anything
about chromatography. We would regularly
replace columns at a rate of 3 to 4 a week.
Of that group, I am the only one still
working with chromatography. Over the years I
have learned that columns are not the source
of problems. If you have proper methods using
mobile phases that consider column chemistry,
include proper sample preparation, provide
instructions for column preparation prior to
and after analysis as well as proper storage
instructions between uses, a column's life
span can be longer than a chromatographer's
career. I have in use in my lab today 3
columns that are 10 years old. One has been
used for 1 analysis jost of its lifetime. The
other 2 have been used for various analytical
tasks and are now each dedicated to 1 of 2
new methods developed in my lab in the last 3
weeks. I offer the following advice;
[1]Clean your columns immediately after AND
IMMEDIATELY BEFORE using them.
[2]If you are not interested in seeing a
sample component with your detector, do not
inject it into your system, USE SAMPLE
PREPARATION TECHNIQUES TO CLEAN UP YOUR
SAMPLES.
[3]Using an ion pairing agent changes the
stationary phase forever, so restrict use of
any column that has been exposed to an ion
pairing agent to methods that employ that
particular ion pairing agent ONLY.
[4]Do not trust HPLC grade chemicals. Vacuum
filter, degas all eluents prior to use even
HPLC grade solvents, water, acetonitrile
methanol, etc. and even if using remnants of
previously prepared eluent. I was the only
one that used a batch of contaminated Caledon
HPLC acetonitrile without loosing any
columns. The supplier replaced the bad
solvent but did not replace anyone damaged
columns.
Gerhard Kratz Hi Nick, as a manufacturer of HPLC columns we
get a lot complaints of users that the column
is not performing well. After my work in
analytical labs in the pharmaceutical
industry, and now about 14 years in sales and
marketing, I can say in jost cases the
problem was not the column. But it is always
very difficult to point out the source of the
problem. Therefore such chromatography forums
are a good opportunity for all users to share
there problem with other users. It's always
helpful to ask, before going mad in the lab,
and loose a lot time and money. Therefore I
hope and wish this new \"internet chat\" LC
forum all the best, to be a useful tool for
all colleagues working with chromatographic
techniques. Good luck. Gerhard Kratz, HPLC
Manager Europe, Tosoh Bioscience GmbH

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