2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2014.11.030
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What experimental factors influence the accuracy of retention projections in gas chromatography–mass spectrometry?

Abstract: Programmed-temperature gas chromatographic (GC) retention information is difficult to share because it depends on so many experimental factors that vary among laboratories. Though linear retention indexing cannot properly account for experimental differences, retention times can be accurately calculated, or “projected”, from shared isothermal retention vs. temperature (T) relationships, but only if the temperature program and hold-up time vs. T profile produced by a GC is known with great precision. The effort… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…All compounds identified by GC-MS ideally should be compared to a current mass spectrum of the appropriate reference standard, preferably obtained from the same instrument, operated under the same conditions. When a reference standard is not analysed concurrently with the sample, one can make use of various chromatographic techniques such as retention time locking [ 41 ], relative retention time [ 42 ] or retention index [ 43 ] to minimize any variation in the retention time of the analyte.…”
Section: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis Of Materials Containinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All compounds identified by GC-MS ideally should be compared to a current mass spectrum of the appropriate reference standard, preferably obtained from the same instrument, operated under the same conditions. When a reference standard is not analysed concurrently with the sample, one can make use of various chromatographic techniques such as retention time locking [ 41 ], relative retention time [ 42 ] or retention index [ 43 ] to minimize any variation in the retention time of the analyte.…”
Section: Qualitative and Quantitative Analysis Of Materials Containinmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, air currents from a fan or air conditioner blowing across the top of the instrument may interfere with gas exiting from the detector and a contaminated detector results in noise. When noise increases gradually to an unacceptable level, it indicates a gradual buildup of the noise source, rather than an abrupt change [39,40].…”
Section: Noisementioning
confidence: 99%