I need a WAX type column that is more inert than ZB-WAXplus

Hi,

 

I am using a ZB-WAXplus column that is causing some degradation to one analyte as it passes along the column.

 

Can anyone suggest a WAX type column phase that has an even more INERT column material?

 

(There was also some thermal degradation in the inlet - but I have fixed this by lowering injector temperature from 250C to <180C - so I am only worried about degradation occurring while the analyte passes along the column.)

 

Cheers,

Murraythermal

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  • Thanks for the replies.

     

    I will look into the Agilent UI WAX column (and a few similar options from other suppliers).

     

    The analyte is primarily thermally degraded - so I have got a good peak but by using a low injector temperature (120C), 35C initial oven (6890 GC with small fan - so cannot really go lower), 2C ramp to 250C, and high He flow 3mL/min (constant flow). Splitless injection (splits of 10:1 or 20:1 did not help).

     

    Column is ZB-WAX 30m * .250 * .25.

     

    This is very slow - but works.

     

    I think I will buy a more inert column - with thicker phase , and slightly wider bore, and shorter length.

     

    Thanks again for all your opinions.

  • Hi Murray,

     

    think about your thermal degradation. This normally happens already in the liner, even at lower temperatures. I would recommend to use an Ultra-Inert liner too, if you cannot do cold-on-column injections.

     

    Thermal degradation that happens on the column, shows up as a kind of fronting on peaks. Smaller fragments from the degradation process elute faster than the bigger parent molecule, not as tailing.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Norbert

Reply
  • Hi Murray,

     

    think about your thermal degradation. This normally happens already in the liner, even at lower temperatures. I would recommend to use an Ultra-Inert liner too, if you cannot do cold-on-column injections.

     

    Thermal degradation that happens on the column, shows up as a kind of fronting on peaks. Smaller fragments from the degradation process elute faster than the bigger parent molecule, not as tailing.

     

    Cheers,

     

    Norbert

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