Gas Chromatography Basics
Overview
This course will help you to gain a sound working knowledge of basic gas chromatographic analysis, principles, and procedures and enable you to develop a greater understanding of theoretical and practical relationships. Throughout seven, one-hour sessions, you will build the expertise you need to choose optimum parameters for separating species present in complex mixtures, and to increase your on-the-job efficiency.
When and Where
The course will meet online for seven, one-hour sessions.
| Course Code
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Session Dates
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Session Time
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| S0902GWEB
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February 6, 13, 20, 27; March 6, 13 and 20
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12 to 1 p.m. ET
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| Join our mailing list to be notified of future dates for this course.
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Key Topics
Here’s what recent attendees had to say about this course:
This is a great course to familiarize people with the basic operation of a GC. I have actually used the knowledge from the course several times to field answers from my boss as well as to develop specific methods.
John Kauffman, Research Specialist, BASF
The course was very interesting. It was set up really well, and Dennis Anderson was a very good lecturer. He has a very good understanding of the subject, and he tried to cover most of the topics of gas chromatography.
Miss Colette Grima, Bsc (Hons) Chem/Bio
- Instrumentation
- Features of the chromatogram
- Components of a GC system
- Qualitative and Quantitative analysis
- Special Applications
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How You'll Benefit
- Gain a better understanding of GC theory.
- Improve your ability to choose the optimum separation mechanism for a given sample.
- Know how to choose the best quantitative control analysis method.
- Increase your knowledge of GC detectors.
- Know the advantages of fused silica open tubular columns.
- Understand the use of hyphenated GC techniques.
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Course Instructor
Dennis Anderson retired from Akzo Nobel Surfactants America following a 40+-year career as an industrial analytical chemist. Mr. Anderson also taught graduate and undergraduate general, analytical, and physical chemistry courses for 23 years at Roosevelt University. He is currently part of the adjunct chemistry faculty at Triton College.
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Who Should Attend
This course is ideal for chemistry professionals from industry, government, or academia involved in the analysis, synthesis, or quality control areas. It will be especially valuable to those who develop new processes, synthesis procedures or analyze samples from R&D and production. Participants should have a background in general chemistry. Experience with instrumental analysis is helpful, but not required.
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Agenda
Instrumentation
- Function of essential components
- How have gas chromatographs evolved over time
Features of the chromatogram
- Retention time/volume
- Separation of components in a mixture
- How good a separation is required
Theory
- Separation mechanisms
- Theoretical plates
- Van Deemter - Golay equation
- Factors affecting separation
- Resolution of peaks in a chromatogram
Components of a gas chromatographic system
Injection techniques
- Injection port [split, split-less, on-column]
- Cold injection port
- Solid samples
- Headspace analysis
- Large volume injections
Columns
- Packed
- Fused silica open tubular
- Stationary phase selection
- Temperature programming
- Flow programming
Detectors
- Thermal conductivity
- Flame ionization
- Electron capture
- Element selective detectors
- Other detectors
Data systems
- Strip chart recorders
- Computer based data systems
Qualitative analysis
- Retention time/volume
- Relative retention time
- “Spiking Techniques”
- Use of multiple columns with different polarity
- Kovats retention indices
- Gas chromatography – mass spectroscopy
Quantitative analysis
- Peak area normalization
- Response factors
- Peak areas x response factors
- Internal standard
- External calibration
Hyphenated techniques
- Gas chromatography – infrared spectroscopy
- Gas chromatography – mass spectroscopy
Special Applications
- Low volatility samples
- Use of derivatives to improve volatility and thermal stability
- Chemical and thermal degradation
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System Requirements
You need a high-speed connection to the Internet and an up-to-date version of your web browser (Internet Explorer is preferred). For the audio portion of the live session, we will use a telephone conference call for attendees from the US and Canada. You will need a phone near your computer capable of making long distance phone calls to a 1-800 number. A hands-free or speaker phone is highly recommended.
International attendees may have access to a toll-free, global call-in number or use VOIP, depending on their country. An ACS staff member will contact you to complete these arrangements. Contact us at shortcourses@acs.org, if you have any questions.
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Course Fees
Note: Each participant must register individually for this course.
| Standard Rate
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$795
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| Group Rate
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5 for 4! Register 5 people for 1 course, 1 person for 5 courses or any combination in between, and the 5th course is free! This offer can only be used in conjunction with webcast registrations. Please register by fax or mail and note this offer on your registration form.
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