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Potential of GC-Combustion-MS as a Powerful and Versatile Nitrogen-Selective Detector in Gas Chromatography

[Image: see text] Here, we show the potential and applicability of the novel GC-combustion-MS approach as a nitrogen-selective GC detector. Operating requirements to achieve reproducible and compound-independent formation of volatile NO species as a selective N-signal during the combustion step are...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: García-Bellido, Javier, Freije-Carrelo, Laura, Redondo-Velasco, Montserrat, Piparo, Marco, Zoccali, Mariosimone, Mondello, Luigi, Moldovan, Mariella, Bouyssiere, Brice, Giusti, Pierre, Encinar, Jorge Ruiz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10413323/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37490591
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.3c01943
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Here, we show the potential and applicability of the novel GC-combustion-MS approach as a nitrogen-selective GC detector. Operating requirements to achieve reproducible and compound-independent formation of volatile NO species as a selective N-signal during the combustion step are described. Specifically, high temperatures (≥1000 °C) and post-column O(2) flows (0.4 mL min(–1) of 0.3% O(2) in He) turned out to be necessary when using a vertical oven without makeup flow (prototype #1). In contrast, the use of a horizontal oven with 1.7 mL min(–1) He as an additional makeup flow (prototype #2) required milder conditions (850 °C and 0.2 mL min(–1)). A detection limit of 0.02 pg of N injected was achieved, which is by far the lowest ever reported for any GC detector. Equimolarity, linearity, and peak shape were also adequate. Validation of the approach was performed by the analysis of a certified reference material obtaining accurate (2% error) and precise (2% RSD) results. Robustness was tested with the analysis of two complex samples with different matrices (diesel and biomass pyrolysis oil) and N concentration levels. Total N determined after the integration of the whole chromatograms (524 ± 22 and 11,140 ± 330 μg N g(–1), respectively) was in good agreement with the reference values (497 ± 10 and 11,000 ± 1200 μg N g(–1), respectively). In contrast, GC-NCD results were lower for the diesel sample (394 ± 42 μg N g(–1)). Quantitative values for the individual and families of N species identified in the real samples by parallel GC–MS and additional GC × GC–MS analyses were also obtained using a single generic internal standard.