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Gas Chromatography (GC) is a powerful analytical technique widely used to separate and analyze volatile organic compounds across a variety of sample types.

How It Works:
In GC, a vaporized sample is introduced into a column filled with a stationary phase. An inert carrier gas (like helium or nitrogen) propels the sample through the column. Compounds move at different rates depending on their chemical properties, allowing for effective separation and detection.

Common Applications of GC:

Monitoring organic contaminants in drinking water

Analyzing fuels and petroleum derivatives

Detecting pesticide residues in food products

Supporting pharmaceutical analysis and forensic investigations

⚙️ Core Components of a GC System:

Sample injection unit

Separation column (often coiled and housed in a temperature-controlled oven)

Detector (typically FID or TCD)

Temperature regulation system

Data acquisition system (generating chromatograms)

Why Use GC?
Gas Chromatography delivers excellent sensitivity and precision, making it indispensable for research, environmental analysis, and quality assurance. Effective use requires careful sample prep, method optimization, and data interpretation.

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Frequently Asked Questions: HPLC Analysis & Chromatography

High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) is an analytical technique used to separate, identify, and quantify each component in a mixture. It relies on a pump to pass a pressurized liquid solvent containing the sample mixture through a column filled with a solid adsorbent material. Each component in the sample interacts slightly differently with the adsorbent material, causing different flow rates for the different components and leading to the separation of the components as they flow out of the column.

Column efficiency is typically measured by the number of Theoretical Plates ($N$). The most common formula is $N = 16 \times (t_r / W)^2$, where $t_r$ is the retention time and $W$ is the peak width at the base. A higher number of theoretical plates indicates a sharper peak and better analytical separation. You can calculate this instantly using our Theoretical Plates Calculator.

The ICH (International Council for Harmonisation) Q2(R1) guidelines mandate specific validation parameters for HPLC methods. These include assessing Accuracy, Precision (Repeatability and Intermediate Precision), Specificity, Detection Limit (LOD), Quantitation Limit (LOQ), Linearity, and Range. Our calculators are designed specifically to help analysts easily compute these linearity, LOD/LOQ, and %RSD parameters in compliance with ICH standards.
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