Gas Chromatography (GC) is a highly sensitive analytical technique used to separate and analyse volatile organic mixtures. GC is commonly used in forensic science, drug testing, and environmental monitoring to identify trace chemicals.
🔑 Key Principle
GC separates compounds based on their volatility and partition between a flowing inert gas (mobile phase) and a liquid or solid coated inside a long, thin column (stationary phase). Compounds with high volatility and low affinity for the stationary phase move faster and exit first.
Stationary and Mobile Phases in GC
Unlike TLC or column chromatography, GC operates at elevated temperatures in an oven, using a gaseous mobile phase:
An inert gas such as helium, nitrogen, or argon. The carrier gas does not interact chemically with the sample; its sole role is to sweep the vaporized sample through the column.
A non-volatile liquid (often a polymer like methyl silicone) coated onto the inside wall of a long, coiled capillary tube (typically 15 to 100 meters long, located in a temperature-controlled oven).
As the vaporized sample travels through the column, the compounds partition between the gas and liquid phases:
- Soluble compounds with high affinity for the liquid stationary phase spend more time dissolved in it. They move slowly through the column, resulting in a longer retention time.
- Volatile, insoluble compounds spend almost all their time in the carrier gas, passing through the column rapidly to yield a shorter retention time.
The time taken for a component to travel from the injection port, through the column, to the detector. It is characteristic of a substance under specific operating conditions.
In a gas chromatogram, the area under each peak, not its height, is proportional to the concentration of that compound. To determine the exact quantity, the peak area is compared against a calibration curve plotted from standard solutions of known concentrations.
Simulated Gas Chromatogram
The plot below represents a chromatogram of a three-component mixture. The area of each peak represents its relative abundance, and its position along the x-axis corresponds to its retention time.
GC-MS (Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry)
While GC is superb at separating mixtures, it cannot identify unknown components based purely on retention times, as these depend heavily on oven parameters. To overcome this, the gas chromatograph is coupled directly to a mass spectrometer.
A hyphenated analytical technique where components are separated by gas chromatography, then pass directly into a mass spectrometer to generate unique fragmentation patterns for positive structural identification.
As each component elutes from the GC column, it undergoes ionization (typically electron impact) in the mass spectrometer. The resulting fragments are separated by their mass-to-charge (\(m/z\)) ratio, generating a mass spectrum for each peak in the chromatogram. The mass spectrum is then compared to a database library of known chemical spectra to identify the unknown compound automatically.
Worked Examples of GC and GC-MS
a) Describe the role of the gas chromatograph in this analysis.
b) Describe the role of the mass spectrometer in this analysis.
Solution:
- a) Role of the GC: The GC separates the complex mixture of compounds present in the urine sample. Volatile components partition between the carrier gas and the stationary phase, eluting from the column at different characteristic retention times. This prevents overlapping signals from interfering with analysis.
- b) Role of the MS: As each separated compound elutes from the GC column, it enters the mass spectrometer. The MS ionizes the molecules, breaks them into fragment ions, and records their mass-to-charge ratios (\(m/z\)) to produce a unique mass spectrum (fragmentation pattern) for structural identification.
Solution:
- Volatility and Intermolecular Forces:
- Butane: Non-polar, exhibiting only weak van der Waals forces. It has the lowest boiling point and is the most volatile. It will have very weak interactions with the polar stationary phase.
- Butanone: Polar, exhibiting dipole-dipole interactions. It has intermediate volatility.
- Butan-1-ol: Highly polar, capable of forming hydrogen bonds. It has the highest boiling point and is the least volatile. It will form strong hydrogen bonds with the polar liquid stationary phase.
- Partition Behavior: Butane dissolves poorly in the polar stationary phase and remains in the carrier gas, traveling fast. Butan-1-ol dissolves very well in the polar stationary phase, spending much of its time immobilized, moving very slowly.
- Conclusion: The order of elution will be:
Butane (shortest retention time) → Butanone → Butan-1-ol (longest retention time).
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