Separation of Isomeric Compounds by Vacuum UV Detector

Authors

  • Ľ. Škultéty Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague
  • T. Pluháček Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague
  • V. Havlíček Institute of Microbiology of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague

Keywords:

vacuum ultraviolet detector, resolution, isomer, coelution

Abstract

Although mass spectrometry has been utilized in a variety of applications, some limitations do exist where isomeric, isobaric, small, labile, or co-eluting compounds are analyzed. In this paper, a vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopy detector for gas chromatography (GC-VUV) is reviewed. The instrumentation is capable of quantitative and qualitative analysis of a wide variety of chemical compounds including hydrocarbons, permanent gases, fatty acids, pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls, estrogens, explosives, psychoactive substances, and photoinitiators. Many chemical substances absorb UV radiation, have characteristic absorption cross-sections in the gas phase at a wavelength of 120–240 nm and can yield a unique absorption spectrum. Compound characterization thus can be accomplished by matching the captured VUV spectrum against the library of reference spectra. A potentially useful feature is the ability to deconvolute overlapping signals and to discriminate co-eluting analytes. If the VUV absorption cross-sections for chemical compounds are known, the accurate number of molecules in the detector (even without calibration) can be determined from the absorption signal.

Published

2020-03-15

How to Cite

Škultéty, Ľ., Pluháček, T., & Havlíček, V. (2020). Separation of Isomeric Compounds by Vacuum UV Detector. Chemické Listy, 114(3), 230–238. Retrieved from http://blog.chemicke-listy.cz/ojs3/index.php/chemicke-listy/article/view/3567

Issue

Section

Articles