HP 5890 Series II Plus Reference Manual page 139

Hewlett-packard reference manual
Table of Contents

Advertisement

Detector Systems
Electron capture detector (ECD)
Table 7-2. General ECD Sensitivity to Various Classes of Compounds
Chemical Type
Hydrocarbons
Ethers, esters
Aliphatic alcohols, ketones, amines;
mono-Cl, mono-F compounds
Mono-Br, di-Cl and di-F compounds
Anhydrides and tri-Cl compounds
Mono-I, di-Br and nitro compounds
Di-I, tri-Br, poly-Cl and poly-F compounds
These are only approximate figures; sensitivity varies widely within each
group, depending upon structure of the material. For example, DDT
(5 chlorine atoms/molecule) can be measured in the 1 to 10 picogram
range.
The ECD is designed for use either with N or with 5% CH in Ar as
carrier gas. A switch selects operation with either carrier gas; the ECD
does not operate properly if the switch is incorrectly set. See Chapter 5 of
the Operating Manual.
Because of its high sensitivity, the ECD should never be used without
traps (moisture, chemical), should be in good condition, and should be
installed in the carrier gas supply line. For capillary systems, this must
also be done for the makeup gas supply.
An ECD is normally used to detect compounds that are reactive enough
to interact with metal columns. Therefore, only 1/4•inchpacked glass, or
fused silica, or glass capillary columns are recommended with this
detector.
Relative Sensitivity
1
10
100
1000
4
10
5
10
6
10
139

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

This manual is also suitable for:

5890 series ii5890 ii series5890 ii plus series

Table of Contents