This document discusses gas chromatography techniques including column resolution, sample injection systems, rotary sample valves, column configurations, temperature programming, and choices for stationary phases. It summarizes key aspects of gas chromatography from Chapter 26 of the textbook by Skoog, Holler, and Niemen, including that sample injection must be slow to avoid band spreading, common column lengths are 2-50m, and temperature programming is used to separate compounds by gradually increasing the column temperature.
This document discusses gas chromatography techniques including column resolution, sample injection systems, rotary sample valves, column configurations, temperature programming, and choices for stationary phases. It summarizes key aspects of gas chromatography from Chapter 26 of the textbook by Skoog, Holler, and Niemen, including that sample injection must be slow to avoid band spreading, common column lengths are 2-50m, and temperature programming is used to separate compounds by gradually increasing the column temperature.
This document discusses gas chromatography techniques including column resolution, sample injection systems, rotary sample valves, column configurations, temperature programming, and choices for stationary phases. It summarizes key aspects of gas chromatography from Chapter 26 of the textbook by Skoog, Holler, and Niemen, including that sample injection must be slow to avoid band spreading, common column lengths are 2-50m, and temperature programming is used to separate compounds by gradually increasing the column temperature.
-Liquid or Gas -Important! Slow injection causes band spreading, poor resolution -Sample is 0.1 to 20 microliters, typical packed column GC or.0001 microliters for capillary GC
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