Aplicații
- 8.000.6005Hyphenated techniques as modern detection systems in ion chromatography
The coupling of highly efficient ion chromatography (IC) to multi-dimensional detectors such as a mass spectrometer (MS) or an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP/MS) significantly increases sensitivity while simultaneously reducing possible matrix interference to the absolute minimum. By means of IC/MS several oxyhalides such as bromate and perchlorate can be detected in the sub-ppb range. Additionally, organic acids can be precisely quantified through mass-based determination even in the presence of high salt matrices. By means of IC-ICP/MS different valence states of the potentially hazardous chromium, arsenic and selenium in the form of inorganic and organic species can be sensitively and unambiguously identified in one single run.
- 8.000.6007Determination of sulfate in denatured ethyl alcohol according to ASTM D7319
In this poster a convenient direct injection suppressed ion chromatographic method for determining chloride and sulfate in denatured ethanol samples according to ASTM D7319 is presented.
- 8.000.6009Determination of lanthanides by ion chromatography using non-suppressed conductivity and UV/VIS detection
The simultaneous ion chromatographic determination of trace-levels of lanthanides (or lanthanoides) was achieved by using either direct non-suppressed conductivity detection or UV/VIS detection after post-column reaction (PCR) with arsenazo III at 655 nm. Conductivity detection under isocratic conditions resulted in an overall analysis time of approx. 70 minutes. In contrast, the determination of the lanthanides via gradient elution and subsequent spectrophotometric detection of the arsenazo III-lanthanide(III) complexes was performed within 22 minutes. Besides the outstanding analysis time, UV/VIS detection excelled by its enhanced selectivity and sensitivity and did not suffer from interferences by ubiquitous non-lanthanide impurities such as iron(III) or other transition metals. For both conductivity and spectrophotometric detection, the inclusion of sample preconcentration steps lowered the limit of detection (LOD) to the sub-ppb range.
- 8.000.6010Inline sample preparation – An effective tool for ion analysis in pharmaceutical products
By means of azide analysis in Irbesartan a simple, fast, precise and accurate ion chromatographic method for the determination of traces of inorganic contaminants in pharmaceuticals is described. Traces of toxic azides in pharmaceutical products can accurately be determined in the sub-ppb range after Metrohm Inline Matrix Elimination using isocratic ion chromatography (IC) with suppressed conductivity detection. While the azide anions are retained on the preconcentration column, the interfering pharmaceutical matrix is washed away by a transfer solution, ideally consisting of 70% methanol and 30% ultrapure water. The analytical setup provides a well-resolved azide peak and thus alleviates the common drawback of excipient interferences, especially from the nitrate anion. Calibration with azide standards is linear over the range of 5…80 ppb, providing a coefficient of determination of 0.9995. The limit of detection (LOD) and the limit of quantification (LOQ) of azide in Irbesartan are 5 and 30 µg/L respectively; the relative standard deviations (RSD) for the peak area, peak height and retention time being smaller than 3.9%. Robustness testing involved variation of column oven temperature and composition of the transfer solution and, in terms of peak area, provided RSDs smaller than 2.8% and 3.1% respectively.
- 8.000.6011Ion chromatographic determination of anions, cations and organic acids in biofuels
Quality and process control of biofuels require straightforward, fast and accurate analysis methods. Ion chromatography (IC) is at the leading edge of this effort. Traces of anions in a gasoline/ethanol blend can accurately be determined in the sub-ppb range after Metrohm Inline Matrix Elimination using anion chromatography with conductivity detection after sequential suppression. While the analyte anions are retained on the preconcentration column, the interfering organic gasoline/bioethanol matrix is washed away.Detrimental alkali metals and water-extractable alkaline earth metals in biodiesel are determined in the sub-ppm range using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection applying automated extraction with nitric acid and subsequent Metrohm Inline Dialysis. Unlike high-molecular substances, ions in the high-ionic strength matrix diffuse through a membrane into the low-ionic water acceptor solution. In biogas reactor samples, low-molecular-weight organic acids stem from the biodegradation of organic matter. Their profile allows important conclusions concerning conversion in the anaerobic digestion reaction. Volatile fatty acids and lactate can be accurately determined by using ion-exclusion chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection after inline dialysis or filtration.
- 8.000.6012Automated logical dilution for ion chromatographic determinations
The combination of 850 Professional IC, 858 Professional Sample Processor, Dosino and MagIC NetTM software offers a variety of sophisticated ion chromatographic sample preparation techniques. One of these is the automated inline dilution of samples.After the first sample injection, MagIC NetTM verifies if the area of the sample peak lies within the calibration range. If the measured peak area is outside these limits, the software calculates the appropriate dilution factor, dilutes and automatically re-injects the sample. For all investigated ions (Li+, Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, F-, Cl- , NO2-, Br-, NO3-, SO42- ), automated logical dilution yielded coefficients of determination (R2) better than 0.9999. Direct-injection recoveries for cations and anions were within 98.6…99.5% and 93.4…100.4% respectively. In contrast, after logical dilution, recoveries for cations and anions were within 100.1…102.9% and 98.2…102.6% respectively. The relative standard deviations for all determinations involving diluted sample solutions were smaller than 0.91%.
- 8.000.6013Analysis of produced water contaminants by ion chromatography
The analytical challenge treated by the present work consists in detecting sub-ppm quantities of bromide, sulfate, aliphatic monocarboxylic acids and several alkaline earth metals in the presence of very high concentrations of sodium and chloride. Bromide, sulfate, acetate and butyrate can be reliably determined by suppressed conductivity detection. Due to matrix effects, propionate can only be detected qualitatively. This drawback can be overcome by coupling the ion chromatograph (IC) to a mass spectrometric (MS) detector. This results in reduced matrix interferences and significantly enhanced sensitivities. The cations magnesium, barium and strontium are determined by non-suppressed conductivity detection.
- 8.000.6014Determination of anions and cations in aerosols by ion chromatography
The study of adverse effects of air pollution requires semi-continuous, rapid and accurate measurements of inorganic species in aerosols and their gas phase components in ambient air. The most promising instruments, often referred to as steam collecting devices, are the Particle-Into-Liquid-Sampler (PILS) coupled to wet-chemical analyzers such as a cation and/or anion chromatograph (IC) and the Monitoring instrument for AeRosols and GAses (MARGA) with two integrated ICs. Both instruments comprise gas denuders, a condensation particle growth sampler as well as pump and control devices. While PILS uses two consecutive fixed denuders and a downstream growth chamber, the MARGA system is composed of a Wet Rotating Denuder (WRD) and a Steam-Jet Aerosol Collector (SJAC). Although the aerosol samplers of PILS and MARGA use different assemblies, both apply the technique of growing aerosol particles into droplets in a supersaturated water vapor environment. Previously mixed with carrier water, the collected droplets are continuously fed into sample loops or preconcentration columns for on-line IC analysis. While PILS has been designed to sample aerosols only, MARGA additionally determines water-soluble gases. Compared to the classical denuders, which remove gases from the air sample upstream of the growth chamber, MARGA collects the gaseous species in a WRD for on-line analysis. In contrast to the gases, aerosols have low diffusion speeds and thus neither dissolve in the PILS denuders nor in the WRD. Proper selection of the ion chromatographic conditions of PILS-IC allows a precise determination, within 4 to 5 minutes, of seven major inorganic species (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, Cl-, NO3- and SO4 2-) in fine aerosol particles. With longer analysis times (10-15 minutes) even airborne low-molecular-weight organic acids, such as acetate, formate and oxalate can be analyzed. MARGA additionally facilitates the simultaneous determination of HCl, HNO3, HNO2, SO2 and NH3.PILS and MARGA provide semi-continuous, long-term stand-alone measurements (1 week) and can measure particulate pollutants in the ng/m3 range.
- 8.000.6015Effect of eluent composition and column temperature on IC column retention times
This work was carried out with a Metrosep C 2 - 150 separation column, the following eluent parameters being investigated: nitric, tartaric, citric and oxalic acid concentration and concentration of the complexing anion of dipicolinic acid (DPA). The aim was to determine the effect of these parameters plus that of the column temperature on the retention times of alkali metals, alkaline earth metals, ammonium and amines using ion exchange chromatography with non-suppressed conductivity detection. Due to similar affinities for the ion exchange column, transition metals are difficult to separate with the classical nitric, tartaric, citric and oxalic acid eluents. Partial complexation with the dipicolinate ligand significantly shortens the retention times and improves the separation efficiency. However, too strong complexation results in a rapid passage through the column and thus in a complete loss of separation. Apart from a change in the elution order of magnesium and calcium at high DPA concentrations, other non-amine cations are only slightly affected by the eluent composition. Irrespective of the tartaric acid and nitric acid concentration in the eluent, an increase in column temperature shortens the retention times and slightly improves the peak symmetries of organic amine cations, particularly in the case of the trimethylamine cation. In contrast, an increase in column temperature in the presence of DPA concentrations exceeding 0.02 mmol/L increases the retention time of the transition metals. Depending on the separation problem, variation of the pH value, the use of a complexing agent and/or an increase in column temperature are powerful tools for broadening the scope of cation chromatography.
- 8.000.6016Advantages of multidimensional ion chromatography for trace analysis
The analytical challenge treated in the present work consists in detecting trace concentrations (ppb) of bromide in the presence of a strong chloride matrix. This problem was overcome by separating the bromide ions from the main fraction of the early eluting chloride matrix (several g/L) by applying two sequential chromatographic separations on the same column. After the first separation, the main fraction of the interfering chloride matrix is flushed to waste, while the later eluting anions are diverted to an anion-retaining preconcentration column. After elution in counter flow, the bromide ions are efficiently separated from the marginal chloride residues. The four-point calibration curves for bromide and sulfate are linear in the range of 10…100 µg/L and 200…800 µg/L and yield correlation coefficients of 0.99988 and 0.99953 respectively. For the method shown here, a second injection valve and a preconcentration column are the only additional devices needed to master this demanding separation problem.
- 8.000.6017Determination of sulfide in mining leachates
Metal precipitation and cyanide recovery in the SART process (sulfidization, acidification, recycling, thickening) depend to a great extent on the sulfide concentration. Among the flow injection analysis methods coupled to wet-chemical analyzers, the combination of a gas diffusion cell with an ion chromatograph (IC) plus subsequent direct spectrophotometric detection has proven to be one of the most convenient methods of sulfide analysis.This paper deals with the determination of sulfide anions via the coupling of a gas diffusion cell to an IC with subsequent spectrophotometric detection.
- 8.000.6033Analysis of energetic materials in various water and soil samples using HPLC and LC-MS
In modern days, a new breed of energetic (explosive) materials is emerging. Traditional aromatic nitrates are still in use, but there is dire need of analytical techniques for energetic materials in the chemical class of peroxides, azo etc. This presentation will demonstrate the use of a modern HPLC system with traditional detector (DAD) and also coupled with mass spectrometry for the analysis of abovementioned various classes of energetic materials.
- 8.000.6035New column generation with built-in intelligence
Metrohm's iColumns are the first IC columns that are equipped with a data chip that stores freely definable data, fixed column data as well as data entered by the MagIC NetTM software. Any relevant information such as column type, standard parameters, maximum pressure, etc. can be called up at any time. Analysis data continuously entered by the MagIC NetTM software guarantees a complete column and GLP-compliant surveillance irrespective of the IC system in which the column is operated. The MagIC NetTM software surveys the critical column data and indicates any infringement of limits.
- 8.000.6037Fully automated inline eluent preparation on demand
By using the 800 Dosino and the 849 Level Control as the only additional devices, Metrohm`s intelligent ion chromatography (IC) systems - the 850 Professional IC and the Compact IC family - can be easily extended to perform any unattended inline eluent preparation. Fully controlled by MagIC NetTM, the 849 Level Control monitors the eluent level while the Dosino performs all dosing and liquid handling tasks. Consecutive injections of a 250-µg/L standard over approximately 20 days revealed an excellent retention-time stability. After more than 800 consecutive injections, relative standard deviations for anions (F-, Cl-, NO2-, Br-, NO3-, PO43-, SO42-) and cations (Li+ , Na+, NH4+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+) were smaller than 0.55 and 0.41%, respectively. In the case of a 24-hour sequence, retention-time precision for anions and cations was better than 0.09 and 0.08%, respectively. The presented inline eluent preparation system increases the retention-time reproducibility and allows the determination of anions and cations over a one-month period without manual eluent preparation.
- 8.000.6040Improved cation separation thanks to a new column material
Comparative measurements show that the new Metrosep C 4 cation column has even better separation characteristics than the previous Metrosep C 2 and Metrosep Cation 1-2 column types. The Metrosep C 4 column has a clearly improved peak shape which leads to a better separation of the individual peaks. Using Metrosep C 4 the number of theoretical plates per meter was noticeably higher than that obtained on the Metrosep C 2 or C 1-2 column. Additionally for standard cations transition metals and amines, the Metrosep C 4 column shows better results with respect to peak shape, peak height, resolution and asymmetry factor. The clearly improved resolution of the C 4 column with its narrow and high peaks achieves baseline separation for six standard and six transition metal cations. Analysis times and peak areas obtained with the C 4 column are in the same range as those obtained with its predecessors.As a result of the latest production methods and materials, the promising Metrosep C 4 column excels by an outstanding separation performance for complex mixtures comprising standard cations, transition metal cations and amines.
- 8.000.6041Simultaneous determination of fluoride species plus acid anions in etching baths by ion chromatography with dual detection
This poster presents a straightforward ion chromatographic determination of HF, HNO3, short-chain organic acids and H2SiF6 in etching bath samples. Standard ions such as fluoride, nitrate, acetate and sulfate are determined via suppressed conductivity detection while dissolved silicate is spectrophotometrically detected in the same run after downstream post-column reaction (PCR) as molybdosilicic acid. Analytical results of several commercial HF-HNO3-H2SiF6 mixtures obtained by ion chromatography (IC) and titration showed good agreement, which confirms the applicability of the presented «dual» detection IC method for controlling the composition of acidic texturing baths.
- 8.000.6042Straightforward multipoint calibration using a single standard
The combination of 850 Professional IC, 858 Professional Sample Processor, Dosino and MagIC NetTM software offers a variety of automated ion chromatographic sample preparation and calibration techniques available as an anion, cation or dual channel system. Calibration is straightforward and requires only one multi-ion standard.Inline calibration allows the calibration of any standard concentration in the ppt range by using one single stable standard solution at the ppb level. By using a preconcentration column and switching the valves one, two or more times different calibration concentrations at the ultra-trace level can be created with unprecedented reproducibility. The inline preconcentration technique uses a pre-concentration column and is ideally suited for trace analysis in complex matrices, especially when combined with matrix elimination. Besides facilitating the preparation of g/L to ng/L calibration graphs Metrohm`s intelligent techniques are capable of logical decision making. While Metrohm`s intelligent Partial Loop technique (MiPT) allows samples with a wide concentration range to be injected without previous manual dilution, the intelligent inline dilution technique, after the first sample injection, compares peak areas, calculates, if necessary, the dilution factor, dilutes and automatically re-injects the sample. The presented inline techniques allow the rationalization of the time-consuming, error-prone and cost-intensive manual preparation of standard solutions. They guarantee that the determined sample concentrations always lie within the calibration range. Higher sample throughputs as well as lower analysis costs and improved data reliability are achieved.
- 8.000.6043Automated dialysis as a sample preparation tool in ion chromatography
The analytical challenge treated in the present work consists in the determination of chloride, phosphate and sulfate in the presence of difficult sample matrices that interact with the stationary column phase or even render it unusable. Metrohm`s patented stopped-flow dialysis coupled to the new 881 Compact IC pro ion chromatograph overcomes these drawbacks. Two standard solutions covering the concentration ranges 1.0…3.6 mg/L and 10…36 mg/L as well as two samples, an ultra-high temperature (UHT) processed milk and a baby milk powder, were characterized in terms of analyte concentration, relative standard deviation, calibration quality, carryover and recovery rates. While the five-point calibration curves yielded correlation coefficients (R) better than 0.9999, carryover (between two subsequent injections of a concentrated sample and a blank) was less than 0.49%. Recoveries for the low (10…36 mg/L) and high standard concentrations (1.0…3.6 mg/L) were within 91…99% and 94…100%, respectively. Automated compact stopped-flow dialysis is a leading-edge sample preparation technique that ensures optimum separation performance by effectively protecting the column from detrimental matrix compounds.
- 8.000.6044Fully automated sample preparation for liquid chromatographic content determinations
Inline coupling of the 815 Robotic Soliprep with an ion chromatograph (IC) allows the straightforward determination of anions and cations in tablets. After automatic solvent addition and subsequent comminution, the homogenized tablet samples (Singulair and Bezafibrat) are filtered and subsequently transferred to the injector. The completely automated sample preparation saves both time and money, guarantees traceability of each sample preparation step and yields correct and precise results. In the range of 0.2…50 mg/L, six-point calibration curves for anions and cations yield correlation coefficients better than 0.99990 and 0.99991, respectively. While relative standard deviations (RSDs) for sub-ppm levels of nitrate, sulfate, calcium and magnesium in Singulair and Bezafibrat are smaller than 3.64%, RSD of ppm levels of chloride is better than 0.83%. The application of further inline sample preparation steps such as pulverizing, extracting, filtering or diluting facilitates numerous custom-tailored setups for ion determinations in exacting matrices such as animal feed, sediments or food.
- 8.000.6045Trace-level aliphatic amines in cationic pharmaceutical ingredients
The analytical challenge treated by the present work consists in detecting sub-ppb concentrations of low-molecular-weight amines in the presence of strongly retained cationic drugs by using ion chromatography (IC) with upstream inline coupled-column matrix elimination (CCME). In contrast to direct-injection IC, where the late elution of strongly retained drugs requires eluents with added acetonitrile, the CCME technique uses two preconcentration columns in series. In an «inverse matrix elimination step, cationic drug and target amines are trapped on a high-capacity and a very-high-capacity preconcentration column, respectively. During amine determination, a rinsing solution flushes the drug to waste. This significantly shortens the analysis time and improves sensitivity as well as selectivity. Besides the determination of monomethylamine in Nebivolol hydrochloride discussed here, the CCME technique is a promising tool for detecting further low-molecular-weight amines in a wide range of drugs.
- 8.000.6052Quality assurance of biofuels
This poster provides an overview of ion chromatographic methods combined with inline sample preparation for the determination of anions and water-extractable cations in biofuels. In addition, the determination of the oxidation stability is described.
- 8.000.6053Trace-level determination of perfluorinated compounds in water by suppressed ion chromatography with inline matrix elimination
This poster describes a simple and sensitive method for the determination of perfluorooctanoate (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in water samples by suppressed conductivity detection. Separation was achieved by isocratic elution on a reversed-phase column thermostated at 35 °C using an aqueous mobile phase containing boric acid and acetonitrile. The PFOA and PFOS content in the water matrix was quantified by direct injection applying a 1000 μL loop. For the concentration range of 2 to 50 μg/mL and 10 to 250 μg/mL, the linear calibration curve for PFOA and PFOS yielded correlation coefficients (R) of 0.99990 and 0.9991, respectively. The relative standard deviations were smaller than 5.8%.The presence of high concentrations of mono and divalent anions such as chloride and sulfate has no significant influence on the determination of the perfluorinated alkyl substances (PFAS). In contrast, the presence of divalent cations, such as calcium and magnesium, which are normally present in water matrices, impairs PFOS recovery. This drawback was overcome by applying Metrohm`s Inline Cation Removal. While the interfering divalent cations are exchanged for non-interfering sodium cations, PFOA and PFOS are directly transferred to the sample loop. After inline cation removal, PFAS recovery in water samples containing 350 mg/mL of Ca2+ and Mg2+ improved from 90…115% to 93…107%.While PFAS determination of low salt-containing water samples is best performed by straightforward direct-injection IC, water rich in alkaline-earth metals are best analyzed using Metrohm`s Inline Cation Removal.
- 8.000.6055Liquid handling applied to automated sample preparation in liquid chromatography
In routine chemical analysis, the predominant challenge involves a higher sample throughput, improved reproducibility, liquid handling flexibility and reduced personnel costs. In response to these requirements, the 872 Extension Module Liquid Handling in combination with the MagIC NetTM software and the well-proven Dosino technology expands the possibilities of inline sample preparation and opens up new fields of application. Among others, the module can be used, together with an optional mixing vessel, for pH adjustments, pre-column derivatizations, or the mixing of solutions.As a representative of an inline sample preparation technique, this poster describes the performance of precise dilutions. By using only one single stable standard solution, multi-point calibration curves can be automatically recorded by diluting a concentrated standard in an external vessel.
- 8.000.6057Simultaneous determination of gamma-hydroxybutyric acid (GHB) and gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) in beverages
Psychoactive gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB) and its prodrug gamma-butyrolactone (GBL) are substances that are increasingly abused as date-rape and recreational (party) drugs. Since the non-controlled GBL converts into the illicit GHB both in-vivo and in-vitro, their legal distinction is of crucial importance.For the forensic determination of illegally added GHB and GBL in commonly consumed beverages, this work presents a simple and sensitive method that employs direct-injection ion chromatography combined with spectrophotometric detection. The method allows to trace GHB-GLB interconversion, whether in vivo or in vitro lactone cleavage or intramolecular GHB esterification, and thus complies with pertinent requirements of law enforcement agencies.
- 8.000.6058Analysis of airborne particulate matter by PILS-IC
This study compares air sampling data obtained by a filter-based method including off-line manual filter extraction followed by ion chromatographic analysis with those gained by an automated Particle-Into-Liquid-Sampler coupled to an ion chromatograph (PILS-IC).PILS-IC is a straightforward instrument for aerosol sampling that provides near real-time measurements for long-term unattended operation and is thus an indispensable tool to monitor rapid changes in aerosol particle ionic composition.
- 8.000.6059Determination of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment
The Restriction of Hazardous Substances (RoHS) Directive 2002/95/EC stipulates maximum limits for the hazardous metals cadmium, lead and mercury as well as the hexavalent chromium and the brominated flame retardants in electrical and electronic products. To ensure compliance, reliable analysis methods are required.This poster deals with the wet-chemical determination of trace concentrations of the six RoHS-restricted substances in a wide variety of materials including metals, electrotechnical components, plastics and wires. After sample preparation according to IEC 62321, the metals lead, cadmium and mercury are best determined by anodic stripping voltammetry (ASV) and the flame retardants PBB and PBDE are quantified by direct-injection ion chromatography (IC) using spectrophotometric detection. Chromium(VI) can be determined either by adsorptive stripping voltammetry (AdSV) or IC. Both methods are very sensitive and meet prescribed RoHS limits.
- 8.000.6063Post-column chemistry for improved optical absorption detection
UV/VIS detection is one of the most sensitive detection techniques in trace-level chromatography. Sometimes, however, spectrophotometric detection lacks sensitivity, selectivity or reproducibility and chemical derivatizations are required. By using Metrohm`s rugged and versatile flow-through reactor, single- or multi-step derivatizations can be done fully automatically, in either pre- or post-column mode at any temperature between 25…120 °C. The variable reactor geometry allows to adjust the reactor residence time of the reactants according to derivatization kinetics. The flexibility of the reactor is demonstrated by optimizing four widespread post-column techniques: the relatively slow ninhydrin reaction with amino acids and the fast derivatizations of silicate, bromate and chromate(VI).
- 8.000.6064Microbore columns: a contribution to green chemistry
Available sample size, mass sensitivity, efficiency and the detector type are important criteria in the selection of separation column dimensions. Compared to conventional 4 mm i.d. columns, microbore columns excel, above all, by their low eluent consumption. Once an eluent is prepared, it can be used for a long time. Additionally, the lower flow rates of microbore columns facilitate the hyphenation to mass spectrometers due to the improved ionization efficiency in the ion source.With the same injected sample amount, a halved column diameter involves a lower eluent flow and results in an approximate four-fold sensitivity increase. In a converse conclusion, this means that with less sample amount, microbore columns achieve the same chromatographic sensitivity and resolution than normal bore columns. This makes them ideally suited for samples of limited availability.
- 8.000.6065Automated ion chromatographic determinations over six orders of magnitude
Metrohm`s intelligent Preconcentration Technique with Matrix Elimination (MiPCT-ME) excels in its capacity to perform automatic ion chromatographic determinations over 6 orders of magnitude. Crucial requirements for this are the system`s intelligence and the exact measurement of the sample volume. While the intelligence allows to compare results and take decisions, the dosing device takes over the high-precision liquid handling of even single-digit microliter volumes to the preconcentration column. By using only one analytical setup and without additional rinsing, samples containing both ultratraces and high concentrations can be analyzed.As the other Metrohm Inline Techniques, the MiPCT-ME technique presented reduces the workload, ensures complete traceability, is free of carryover effects and significantly improves accuracy and reproducibility of the results.
- 8.000.6071Trace-level determination of anions in the primary circuit of a PWR-type nuclear power plant using ion chromatography after inline sample preparation
The poster presents the ion chromatographic determination of organic degradation products such as glycolate, formate and acetate besides the standard anions fluoride, chloride, nitrate and sulfate.
- 8.000.6072Trace-level determination of cations in the secondary circuit of a PWR-type nuclear power plant using ion chromatography after inline sample preparation
The presented IC system with inline sample preparation allows the determination of traces of lithium and sodium (ppt) in the presence of ppm quantities of ammonium and ethanolamine.
- 8.000.6073Determination of anions in concentrated nitric acid by ion chromatography: the influence of temperature on column selectivity
Determination of chloride and sulfate in the presence of high nitrate concentrations. Optimization of the chromatographic separation by variation of the temperature and eluent composition.
- 8.000.6074Influence of pH, temperature, and molybdate concentration on the performance of the triiodide method for the trace-level determination of bromate (EPA 326)
This poster discusses results showing the influence of pH, temperature of the post-column reactor, eluent composition, and iodide concentration on the sensitivity of the triiodide method.
- 8.000.6075Determination of pyrophosphate, trimetaphosphate, tripolyphosphate, and standard ions in detergents or fertilizers using IC with a high-capacity suppressor
Three different suppressor systems are compared in terms of sensitivity. Additionally, binary gradient elution was applied to analyze phosphates in the presence of mono- and divalent ions.
- 8.000.6076Sequential suppression for conductivity detection in ion chromatography
The poster describes how different suppressors (MSM and MCS) work and mentions possible applications.
- 8.000.6086Semi-continuous determination of anions, cations, and heavy metals in aerosols using PILS-IC-VA
This poster presents an approach that couples a Particle-Into-Liquid-Sampler (PILS) to a dual-channel ion chromatograph (IC) for measurement of aerosol anions and cations and a voltammetric measuring stand (VA) to determine the heavy metals. Feasibility of the PILS-IC-VA online system was demonstrated by collecting aerosol samples in Herisau Switzerland, at defined time intervals; air pollution events were simulated by burning lead- and cadmium-coated sparklers.
- 8.000.6087Determination of hexavalent chromium in drinking water according to a U.S. EPA Method
This poster looks at the possibility to modify the existing EPA Method to meet California's rigorous public health goal (PHG) of 0.02 µg/L. After optimizing instrument settings and method parameters, a method detection limit (MDL) of 0.01 µg/L is obtained.
- 8.000.6091Ion chromatographic determination of halogens and sulfur in solids using combustion as inline sample preparation
The Combustion IC system presented allows the automated determination of organic halogen and sulfur compounds in all flammable samples. Both combustion digestion, which is automatically controlled with a flame sensor, and the professional Liquid Handling guarantee highest precision and trueness. This poster describes the determination of the halogen and sulfur content in a certified polymer standard, a coal reference material as well as in latex and vinyl gloves.
- 8.000.6101Analysis of Anions and Oxoanions using Ion Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (IC-MS)
Ion chromatography tackles difficult separation problems of various ionic species and typically works with conductivity detection. Mass detection as a secondary independent detector significantly lowers the detection limits and confirms the identity of analytes even when coeluting. This poster describes how the combination of IC-MS and automated sample preparation techniques cope with the analysis of anions and oxoanions in challenging matrices such as soil or explosion residues.
- 8.000.6102Ion chromatography – the all-rounder for pharmaceutical analysis
Pharmaceutical analysis guarantees drug safety by providing information on the identity, content, quality, purity, and stability of pharmaceutical products using analytical chemistry. Ion chromatography (IC) offers a broad range of pharmacopeia-compliant applications for quality control, monitoring, and improving drug manufacturing.As a very accurate and versatile technique, IC meets the requirements of many pharmaceutical applications. IC is a USP-accepted standard method for the determination of active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), excipients, impurities,pharmaceutical solutions as well as pharmaceutical starting materials, finished pharmaceutical products (FPPs) and even body fluids.This poster describes some typical examples.
- 8.000.6103Speciation of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) by IC-ICP-MS and Empower 3
This poster demonstrates the feasibility of coupling a Metrohm IC system to a PerkinElmer NexION ICP-MS, operated under Empower 3 Software.Using a Metrosep Carb 2 column, the chromatographic separation of both species was achieved with a high resolution. Low background and high sensitivity allow determination in the low ng/L range.Optimal separation and full complexation of Cr(III) is already possible with EDTA concentrations from 40 μmol/L in low matrix solutions and may need to be increased depending on the sample matrix.Handling of the system was easy and user friendly. It was shown that speciation of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) can be carried out on this system utilizing a professional data system for acquisition, processing, and reporting.
- 8.000.6105Selective and Sensitive determination of Zinc in Various OTC formulations as per USP <591>
This poster presented jointly with USP at AAPS meeting shows the new USP method for zinc as per <591> using Ion Chromatography which is highly selective and sensitive. Selectivity is achieved by separation and further improved with PCR reaction. Sensitivity and wide linear quantification limit make the new USP method ideal for QA/QC. Automated PCR delivery makes the overall method performance easy to validate.
- 8.000.6106Potassium Assay in OTC Drug Products by Ion Chromatography
This poster presented jointly with USP at AAPS meeting shows, that we successfully developed and validated a single IC procedure for potassium assay and identification in potassium bicarbonate and potassium chloride for effervescent oral suspension. The optimized chromatographic conditions could be used for other cationic impurities, such as magnesium, calcium, sodium, and ammonium in potassium bicarbonate and potassium chloride for effervescent oral suspension. Single chromatographic method for assay and identification simplifies the overall QA/QC workflow.
- 8.000.6107USP Modernization Initiative: Ionic Impurities in Drug Substances by Ion Chromatography
This poster presented jointly with USP at AAPS meeting shows, that we successfully validated an IC method to determine chloride and sulfate in drug substances, potassium bicarbonate and potassium carbonate. The proposed IC method overcomes limitations of the turbidimetry/visual comparison methods.
- 8.000.6109USP Modernization Initiative: Iodide Assay by Ion Chromatography
Potassium iodide (KI) is used to treat overactive thyroid and to protect the thyroid gland from the effects of radiation from inhaled or swallowed radioactive iodine. Currently, in the USP Potassium Iodide Monograph, iodide identification is performed by wet chemistry and assay by manual titration, which has a history of reduced precision and accuracy. As part of USP’s global monograph modernization initiative, an alternative selective and sensitive method was developed and validated – ion chromatography (IC). The proposed IC method can also be used for the identification test as an alternative to wet chemistry.
- 8.000.6110Fluoride in OTC Products by Ion Chromatography
Fluoride is commonly used in dental products to help prevent tooth decay. When fluoride is present in high concentrations, these products are regulated by 21 CFR 355. Three fluoride compounds used in over the counter (OTC) anti‐cavity dental products are sodium fluoride, stannous fluoride and sodium monofluorophosphate (MFP). The assay of fluoride in these active ingredients and finished formulations are determined by manual titration, or by ion‐selective electrodes. As a part of USP’s global monograph modernization initiative, an alternative selective and sensitive method has been developed and validated – ion chromatography (IC). The proposed IC method can also be used for the identification test as an alternative to the wet chemistry method.
- 8.000.6112Technical Poster: Haloacetic acids in water
LC-MS/MS quantification methods are commonly used to determine trace levels of organic compounds. However, highly polar reversed phases (RPs) lack sufficient retention for very polar compounds, or they fail for charged organics. Separation using ion chromatography (IC) and subsequent MS/MS detection is an innovative alternative approach that combines the fast elution and flexibility of the IC system with the excellent resolution and high sensitivity of the MS/MS detector. This poster presents a fast, robust and reliable IC-MS/MS method for the detection of HAAs and other ionic analytes using the high-end MS/MS system QTRAP 6500+ from SCIEX coupled to a the 940 Professional IC Vario One SeS/PP/HPG instrument. This analytical setup is able to identify and quantify the presence of HAAs at trace levels with LLODs between 0.02 μg/mL and 0.2 μg/L on a single HAA. This capability easily fulfills the sensitivity requirements specified in EU Drinking Water Directive, which specifies a maximum residue level (MRL) of 60 mg/mL for the sum of monochloroacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid, trichloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic acid and dibromoacetic acid present in the representative sample.
- AB-128Electrochemical detection in HPLC
In our Instructions for Use for the 656 Electrochemical Detector the user will find all the basic information about how it works and how to use it as well as how to handle the electrodes. They also contain information about the demands placed on the separating system together with the causes of and remedies for detection problems.Application Bulletin no. 128 is intended to provide an overview of the most important substance classes and mention some compounds that can easily be determined oxidatively, i.e., with detection limits in the pg range; it also mentions possible working conditions for separation and electrochemical detection and illustrates them with examples.
- AB-211Sample preparation for ion chromatography
The sample preparation for ion chromatography is divided into steps which should generally be implemented to preserve the column and into steps which should be performed to obtain an improved chromatogram. The goal is to have the test substance in ionic form in solution without the presence of interfering substances.
- AB-221Standard methods in water analysis
This Bulletin gives a survey of standard methods from the field of water analysis. You will also find the analytical instruments required for the respective determinations and references to the corresponding Metrohm Application Bulletins and Application Notes. The following parameters are dealt with: electrical conductivity, pH value, fluoride, ammonium and Kjeldahl nitrogen, anions and cations by means of ion chromatography, heavy metals by means of voltammetry, chemical oxygen demand (COD), water hardness, free chlorine as well as a few other water constituents.
- AB-265Hamilton PRP-X100 IC anion column (6.1005.000)
This Bulletin describes the determination by ion chromatography of anions, particularly fluoride, chloride, nitrite, bromide, nitrate, and sulfate using the Hamilton PRPX100 IC anion column without chemical suppression.
- AN-C-0083-Dimethylamino-1-propylamine in cocoamidopropyl betaine
Determination of 3-dimethylamino-1-propylamine in cocoamidopropyl betaine using cation chromatography with direct conductometric detection.
- AN-C-022Sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in a drip feeding formula using dialysis for sample preparation
Determination of sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in a drip feeding formula using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection and dialysis as sample preparation.
- AN-C-028Four cations in an instant baby milk powder using dialysis for sample preparation
Determination of sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in instant baby milk powder using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection and dialysis for sample preparation.
- AN-C-031Calcium and magnesium in high-purity sodium chloride
Determination of calcium and magnesium in high-purity sodium chloride using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-032Noise reduction in non-suppressed ion chromatography using the 732 IC Detector - the benefits of the Metrohm auto zero / full scale approach
The use of an appropriate full scale together with the zero function of the 732 IC Detector minimizes baseline noise dramatically. Much lower detection limits are achieved.
- AN-C-038Five cations in 4% boric acid
Determination of sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in 4% boric acid using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-040Calcium and magnesium in rock extracts
Determination of calcium and magnesium in rock extracts using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-049Trace cations in power plant feed water stabilized with 7 ppm monoethanolamine (MEA)
Determination of zinc, lithium, cobalt, sodium, ammonium, potassium, manganese, magnesium, and calcium in power plant feed water stabilized with 7 ppm monoethanolamine using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-051Determination of aluminum using post-column reaction and UV detection
Determination of aluminum using cation chromatography, post-column reaction and UV detection.
- AN-C-055Determination of lead, zinc, indium, cadmium, cobalt, ammonium, potassium, manganese, magnesium, and calcium
Determination of lead, zinc, indium, cadmium, cobalt, ammonium, potassium, manganese, magnesium, and calcium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-056Sodium, ammonium, methylamine, guanidine, and aminoguanidine in wastewater
Determination of sodium, ammonium, methylamine, guanidine (Gu), and aminoguanidine (Agu) in wastewater using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-059Sodium, ammonium, and potassium in polyethers
Determination of sodium, ammonium, and potassium in polyethers using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-060Magnesium, strontium, and barium in produced water (11 g/L sodium)
Determination of magnesium, strontium, and barium in produced water using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-061Zinc and manganese in the presence of standard cations in an extract of a zinc compound
Determination of zinc, sodium, ammonium, and manganese in the presence of magnesium and calcium in an extract of a zinc compound using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-062Five cations including iron in monoethylene glycol (MEG)
Determination of sodium, potassium, iron(II), magnesium, and calcium in an extract of monoethylene glycol using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-063Five cations in lithium bromide using post-column reaction
Determination of nickel, zinc, cobalt, iron(II), and manganese in lithium bromide using cation chromatography with UV/VIS detection (520 nm) after post-column reaction with PAR.
- AN-C-064Five cations in betaine
Determination of sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in betaine using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-066Four cations in the water soluble fraction of a washing powder
Determination of sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in the water soluble fraction of a washing powder using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-067Cations in grapefruit soft drink using inline dialysis
Determination of sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in a grapefruit soft drink using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection after advanced dialysis for inline sample preparation.
- AN-C-068Cations in functional fruit juice using inline dialysis
Determination of sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in a functional fruit juice using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection after advanced dialysis for inline sample preparation.
- AN-C-069Zinc, sodium, calcium, and magnesium in an industrial bath
Determination of zinc, sodium, calcium, and magnesium in an industrial bath containing cooling lubricants using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-070Cations and biogenic amines in wine
Determination of sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, putrescine, cadaverine, and histamine in a wine sample using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-071Choline in a saline solution
Determination of sodium, potassium, DMEA (dimethylethanolamine), calcium, choline, and magnesium in a saline solution using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-073Calcium and magnesium in dolomite
Determination of calcium and magnesium in a dolomite sample using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-074Trimethylamine in hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)
Determination of trimethylamine in hydrogen peroxide (31 %) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection after inline matrix elimination, inline preconcentration, and inline calibration.
- AN-C-078Ethanolamines in the presence of alkali metal and alkaline earth cations
Determination of mono-, di-, and trimethanolamine (MMA, DMA, TMA respectively), in the presence of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, cesium, calcium, and strontium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-082Ammonium, magnesium, and calcium in fertilizer
Determination of ammonium, magnesium, and calcium in a fertilizer using cation chromatography with directconductivity detection.
- AN-C-083Online monitoring of trace levels of cations in boiler feed water
Determination of trace levels of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in boiler feed water using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-084Ammonium, magnesium, and calcium in liquid fertilizer
Determination of ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in a liquid fertilizer using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection..
- AN-C-085Betaine in an Echinacea product
Determination of betaine in the presence of standard cations in an Echinacea product using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-086Zinc and standard cations in infusion solutions
Determination of zinc, sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in an infusion solution using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-090Traces of zinc and iron(II) in the presence of the standard cations
Determination of traces of zinc and iron(II) in the presence of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in boiler water using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-091Magnesium, manganese, and zinc in zinc sulfate solution
Determination of magnesium, manganese, and zinc in a zinc sulfate solution using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-092Amines in fish
Determination of dimethylamine (DMA), trimethylaminoxide (TMAO), trimethylamine (TMA), putrescine, cadaverine, and histamine in a fish sample using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-093Four amines in the presence of standard cations with preconcentration
Determination of traces of methylamine, isopropylamine diethylethanolamine, and diethylamine in the presence of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-095Methylamine (MMA), dimethylamine (DMA), and trimethylamine (TMA) in methylpyrrolidone using Metrohm Inline Matrix Elimination
Determination of traces of methylamine, dimethylamine, and trimethylamine in methylpyrrolidone using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-096Trace analysis of monovalent cations in an ethanolamine matrix (secondary cycle of a pressurized water reactor) using Metrohm Inline Sample Preparation with an 800 Dosino for liquid handling
Methylamine (MMA), dimethylamine (DMA), and trimethylamine (TMA) in methylpyrrolidone using Metrohm Inline Matrix Elimination.
- AN-C-097Cations in ethanol used as biofuel
Determination of traces of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in ethanol using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection after Metrohm Inline Matrix Elimination.
- AN-C-098Lanthanides by ion chromatography using non-suppressed conductivity detection
Determination of traces of lutetium, ytterbium, thulium, erbium, terbium, gadolinium, samarium, neodymium, praseodymium, cerium, and lanthanum using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-099Lanthanides in a rock sample by ion chromatography using non-suppressed conductivity detection
Determination of traces of gadolinium, samarium, neodymium, cerium, and lanthanum using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection after Metrohm Inline Filtration.
- AN-C-100Choline in infant milk powder using online dialysis
Determination of choline in infant milk powder using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection applying Metrohm Inline Dialysis.
- AN-C-101Cations in biodiesel with fully automated aqueous extraction and subsequent dialysis
Determination of potassium, magnesium, and calcium in biodiesel using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection applying automated extraction and subsequent Metrohm Inline Dialysis.
- AN-C-102Standard cations in orange juice
Determination of sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in orange juice using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection applying automated dilution and subsequent Metrohm Inline Ultrafiltration.
- AN-C-103Standard cations in lake water on the Metrosep C 3 - 250/4.0 column
Determination of lithium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in lake water using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-104Low levels of ammonium in the presence of standard cations on the Metrosep C 3 - 250/4.0 column
Determination of traces of ammonium in the presence of sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-105Copper, zinc, iron(II), and manganese in wine by ion chromatography with post-column reaction and UV/VIS detection
Determination of copper, zinc, iron(II), and manganese in red wine using cation chromatography with UV/VIS detection after post-column reaction with PAR.
- AN-C-106Lanthanides by ion chromatography with post-column reaction and UV/VIS detection
Determination of traces of lutetium, ytterbium, thulium, erbium, terbium, gadolinium, samarium, neodymium, praseodymium, cerium, and lanthanum using cation chromatography with gradient elution and UV/VIS detection after post-column reaction with Arsenazo III.
- AN-C-107Hydroxylamine, ethanolamine, triethanolamine, and hydrazine on the Metrosep C 3 - 250/4.0 cation column
Determination of hydroxylamine, ethanolamine, triethanolamine, and hydrazine using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-108Methylamine in the presence of standard cations on the Metrosep C 3 - 250/4.0 cation column
Determination of methylamine in the presence of sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-109Trans-4-methylcyclohexylamine in a pharmaceutical product
Determination of trans-4-methylcyclohexylamine in a pharmaceutical product using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-110Tributylamine in gabapentine
Determination of tributylamine in a pharmaceutical product (gabapentine) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-111N-methylpyrrolidone impurity in Cefepime Hydrochloride
Determination of N-methylpyrrolidone (N-MP) in a pharmaceutical product (Cefepime Hydrochloride) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-112Inline eluent preparation for cation analysis
Long-term determination of standard cations with automatic inline eluent preparation using Dosino and Level Control instruments and cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-113Determination of lysine and standard cations in a lysine sample
Determination of lysine as well as sodium, ammonium, potassium, and calcium in bulk lysine using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-114Semi-continuous determination of cations in aerosol using PILS-IC
Determination of sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in an ambient aerosol (PM2.5) using aerosol sampling with the PILS (Particle Into Liquid Sampler) and cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-115Five cations in tap water
Determination of lithium, sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium in tap water using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-116Sodium and potassium in toothpaste
Determination of sodium and potassium in toothpaste using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-117MiPT – Metrohm intelligent Partial Loop Technique
Calibration of lithium, sodium, ammonium, zinc, potassium, magnesium, and calcium using the partial loop technique and cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. This technique allows a calibration range of 1:100 (e.g. 1 μg/L to 100 μg/L corresponding to 2 μL to 200 μL injected volume) out of 1 calibration solution. Applying the full range of partial loop injection to the samples one calibration covers a sample concentration range of 1 to 10'000 e.g. 2 μL of a 10 mg/L solution corresponds to the highest calibration level (100 μg/L) while 200 μL of a 1 μg/L solution corresponds to the lowest calibration level.
- AN-C-118Impurities in syringe filters – Cations
Determination of lithium, sodium, ammonium, zinc, potassium, magnesium, and calcium impurities in syringe filters using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-119Bethanechol chloride and calcium in tablets (Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0)
Determination of Bethanechol chloride and calcium in tablets using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-120Bethanechol chloride and HPTA (2-hydroxy-propyl-trimethyl ammonium chloride) in the presence of sodium and calcium (Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0)
Determination of Bethanechol Chloride and HPTA (2-hydroxy-propyl-trimethyl ammonium chloride) besides sodium and calcium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-121Strontium and barium in monoethylene glycol
Determination of strontium and barium in monoethylene glycol using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-122Cations including total iron content in antifreeze (monoethylene glycol)
Determination of sodium, potassium, iron(II), magnesium and calcium in antifreeze (monoethylene glycol) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. Ascorbic acid reduces iron(III) to iron(II). In this way total iron is determined as iron(II).
- AN-C-123Cations including strontium in brine
Determination of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, and strontium in brine using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-124Ethanolamines in the presence of standard cations (Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0)
Determination of monoethanolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA), and triethanolamine (TEA) in the presence of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-125Methylamines in the presence of standard cations including cesium (Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0)
Determination of monomethylamine (MMA), dimethyl-amine (DMA), and trimethylamine (TMA) in the presence of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, cesium, calcium, and magnesium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-126Methylamines and ethanolamines (Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0)
Determination of monomethylamine (MMA), dimethylamine (DMA), trimethylamine (TMA), monoethanolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA), and triethanolamine (TEA) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-127Benzylamine in a beta blocker
Determination of benzylamine in a beta blocker (Nebivolol) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. A step gradient for fast elution of the main component is applied.
- AN-C-128Dimethylamine in Metformin
Determination of dimethylamine in Metformin (N,N-dimethylimidodicarbonimidic diamide, anti-diabetic drug) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-129Nine cations on the Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 column
Determination of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, manganese, calcium, magnesium, strontium, and barium using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-130Cations in offshore effluent
Determination of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, manganese, calcium, magnesium, strontium, and barium in an offshore effluent using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-131Magnesium, cadmium, and iron in phosphoric acid
Determination of magnesium, cadmium, and iron in phosphoric acid using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-132Traces of lithium, sodium, and ammonium in the presence of ethanolamine (Metrosep C 4 - 250/4.0)
Determination of lithium, sodium, ammonium, and monoethanolamine (MEA) using cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection and Metrohm Inline Preconcentration and Inline Calibration.
- AN-C-133Tap water analysis for cations using Metrohm intelligent Partial Loop Technique (MiPT)
Partial loop injection is a well known way of sample introduction to HPLC. In ion chromatography, it is not yet used to a large extent. Liquid handling with Metrohm's Dosino technology now enables to use partial loop injection on a highly reproducible and accurate level. It includes multi-level calibration out of one standard solution. This Application Note shows its use for parallel anion and cation determination in tap water applying one single Sample Processor. The anion results are shown in Application Note S–287.
- AN-C-134Cation Inline Eluent Preparation using an 849 Level Control.
Eluent preparation on demand (EPOD) is the convenient and flexible way of automatic eluent preparation. The 849 Level Control together with an 800 Dosino equipped with a 50 mL dosing unit are used to dilute an eluent concentrate to the required eluent concentration. The use of eluent concentrates is suitable for any eluent. This facilitates unattended operation of the system over several weeks (see AN S-296 for anion eluent preparation).
- AN-C-135Cations in drinking water using Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 column according to ISO 14911.
Drinking water analysis is strongly regulated by standards. In this Application Note, the cation determination according to ISO 14911 is shown. The Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 is the optimum separation column for this purpose.
- AN-C-136Metrohm intelligent Partial Loop Technique (MiPT) – a single standard calibration: 2 mL vs. 5 mL Dosing Unit
Metrohm intelligent Partial Loop Technique (MiPT) is a versatile injection mode in IC. In this application, injection volumes range from 4 to 200 µL (corresponding to 0.5 - 10 mg/L) using the 250 µL loop. Here, the use of 2 and 5 mL Dosing Units are compared.
- AN-C-137Copper, nickel, zinc, and common cations in the water-steam cycle of a boiling water reactor (BWR)
Water chemistry of the water-steam cycle is crucial for maintaining plant reliability and for ensuring optimal plant operational conditions. Impurities such as corrosion products in ionic, colloidal, or oxide forms are ubiquitous in feedwater, condensate, and reactor coolant. This application shows the determination of sub-ppb levels of Cu, Ni, Zn and standard cations (e.g., Na+, NH4+, Mg2+, Ca2+) in the water-steam cycle of a BWR.
- AN-C-138Zinc, nickel, calcium, and magnesium in borated water of a pressurized water reactor (PWR)
In pressurized water reactors (PWRs), light water is used as primary coolant. Boron (as boric acid) readily absorbs neutrons and is added to the coolant to control reactivity. Lithium hydroxide assures a pH value greater than 7 to prevent corrosion. This application allows to measure sub-ppb levels of zinc, nickel, calcium, and magnesium besides high boric acid and lithium hydroxide concentrations.
- AN-C-139Cations and amines in the water-steam cycle
Water in steel-based cooling systems requires a pH value slightly above 7 to prevent corrosion. Often ammonium or organic amines are applied for pH adjustement. This application shows the separation of typical amines besides inorganic cations. Sample preconcentration applies combined Inline Preconcentration and Matrix Elimination (MiPCT-ME).
- AN-C-140Lithium in borated water of a pressurized water reactor (PWR)
In pressurized water reactors (PWRs), light water is used as coolant in the primary side. Boron (as boric acid) is added to the coolant to absorb neutrons, thus controlling reactivity. Lithium hydroxide assures the alkaline pH value to prevent corrosion. This application allows to measure lithium content besides high boric acid concentrations. AN-C-138 shows the respective trace metal determination on the same system setup.
- AN-C-141Cations in small sample volumes by using the intelligent Pick-up Injection Technique (MiPuT)
The determination of cations in tap water is a simple IC application. Here it is used to present Metrohm's intelligent Pick-up Technique (MiPuT). MiPuT enables the injection of volumes of minimum size from very small sample quantities. In the present case, two volumes of 10 µL from a sample 100 µL in size are used for anion and cation analysis, respectively. The calibration takes place through the injection of various volumes of a single standard solution. AN-S-302 describes the corresponding anion determination.
- AN-C-142Separation of the standard cations on the high-capacity Metrosep C 6 separation columns
The Metrosep C 6 columns have a higher capacity than those of the Metrosep C 4. The present Application Note describes the exceptional separating efficiency for standard cations with the three Metrosep C 6 column lengths available. The outstanding sodium-ammonia separation is particularly noteworthy.
- AN-C-143Ammonia in addition to standard cations in maritime pore water
Maritime pore water contains sodium in the percentage range. The analysis of ammonia in this kind of sample requires a high column capacity and an exceptionally good separation of sodium and ammonia. These requirements are completely fulfilled by a 2 µL injection to the high-capacity Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 column.
- AN-C-144Variable Inline Preconcentration including matrix elimination for trace cation determination (MiPCT-ME)
Metrohm Inline Preconcentration Technique with matrix elimination (MiPCT-ME) is a powerful method that combines preconcentration, matrix elimination, and multilevel calibration. In this Application Note, the methodology is applied to the determination of traces of sodium in addition to 2 mg/L ammonia. The Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 column is used for selectivity reasons.
- AN-C-145Ammonium traces besides excess sodium using 940 Professional IC Vario and direct conductivity detection
The determination of low ammonium concentrations besides excess sodium is demanding due to the small retention time difference of these two cations. This Application Note shows direct conductivity detection as an ideal means to detect ammonium in a wastewater sample containing 400 mg/L sodium. AN-S-313 shows the analysis of nitrite traces.
- AN-C-146Bethanechol and HPTA (2-hydroxy-propyl-trimethyl ammonium) besides sodium and calcium (Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0)
Bethanechol is a pharmaceutical compound which is used to treat urinary retention. This API (active pharmaceutical ingredient) can be determined by cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. A good separation is achieved between bethanechol and its degradation product 2-hydroxy-propyl-trimethyl ammonium (HPTA) and the standard cations. Peak shape and resolution meet the USP requirements for bethanechol.
- AN-C-147Fast analysis of cations in tap water using Metrosep C 4 - 100/2.0
Reducing the analysis time is a demanding task because it is accompanied by a parallel reduction of peak resolution. With a Microbore column 100 mm in length, standard cations in tap water can be determined in only 5 minutes. Strontium can also be determined by simply extending the run time to 6.5 min.
- AN-C-148Metrohm Inline Dilution – Dilution factors of up to 10,000 in two intelligent steps
Sample dilution is a work-intensive routine task in the analysis laboratory. An automatic two-step dilution exponentiates the dilution factor – 1:100 – thus incorporating a dilution factor of 10,000. The intelligent dilution is made possible by MagIC Net, which calculates the essential dilution steps, and by the dosing properties of the 800 Dosino and the Liquid Handling Station. The Application Note shows statistical results of a 1:10,000 dilution.
- AN-C-149Determination of cations on surfaces of printed circuit boards
Cleanliness is indispensable in electronics production. Ionic contaminations in particular lead to a drastic worsening of the quality of the printed circuit boards. The present Application Note describes the determination of cations on printed circuit board surfaces. The intelligent Partial Loop Injection Technique (MiPT) used for this purpose permits the determination of cations and anions in the same sample. The determination of the anions is described in AN-S-317.
- AN-C-150Fast IC: Separation of standard cations in eleven minutes
Fast IC means short run times on separation columns with a relatively high flow rate and the standard eluent. Here the standard cations are separated within eleven minutes on the Metrosep C 4 - 250/2.0. The sodium and ammonium peaks are separated from one another under these conditions.
- AN-C-151Fast IC: Separation of standard cations in five minutes
Fast IC means short run times on separation columns with a relatively high flow rate. Separation with the Metrosep C 4 - 150/2.0 is even quicker than that in the AN-C-150 at 1.1 mL/min. Here, the standard cations are separated within five minutes. Under the selected conditions, sodium and ammonium are no longer completely separated.
- AN-C-152Fast IC: Separation of ethanolamines in 2.5 minutes
Fast IC means short run times and a high sample throughput on columns with a relatively high flow rate and the standard eluent. Mono-, di- and tri-ethanolamine are separated with the Metrosep C 4 - 150/2.0 within 2.5 minutes.
- AN-C-153Fast IC: Separation of methylamines in four minutes
Fast IC means short run times and a high sample throughput on columns with a relatively high flow rate and the standard eluent. Mono-, di- and trimethylamine are separated with the Metrosep C 4 - 150/2.0 within four minutes.
- AN-C-154Fast IC: Cations in drinking water on a high-capacity column in eleven minutes
Fast and handsome IC! Outstanding peak shapes on columns with the standard flow rate and a strong eluent. When the high-capacity Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 is used, this usually means long retention times. A strong eluent allows however the determination of the cations in drinking water in a short run time with very symmetrical peaks.
- AN-C-155Selectivity of the high-capacity Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 cation column
The high-capacity Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 cation column convinces with outstanding separations, narrow peaks, and a multitude of available eluents. In this Note, the selectivity for alkali, earth alkali, and certain transition metals, in addition to methyl and ethanol amines, is shown using a nitric acid eluent and direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-156Temperature dependency of the cation separation on the Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column
The column temperature influences the duration of the cation separation on the high-performance Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column. The retention times of lithium, sodium, ammonium, magnesium, and calcium remain practically constant with increasing column temperature, whereas those of potassium, strontium, and barium are considerably shortened. This means that the temperature can be used to reduce analysis time considerably on the Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0.
- AN-C-157Sodium and potassium in polyol using IC following inline matrix elimination
Polyols are important raw materials in polyurethane production. Contamination in the raw materials have a great influence on reactions and impair the quality of the end product. Alkali metals are particularly strong catalysts for linear or branched reactions. A rapid and precise method for their simultaneous determination is ion chromatography following Inline Matrix Elimination.
- AN-C-158Column stability of the Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 with Inline Ultrafiltration and Inline Eluent Preparation
The column stability of the Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 was determined in long-term laboratory tests. Two injection series per day were run on each of six days in a row. Each series was comprised of nine tap water injections, three check standard injections and six tap water injections. The IC system was shut down on the seventh day of each series. As a whole, the system ran over 10 weeks and counted a total of 2,150 injections. The results show an outstanding reproducibility and verify the high column stability.
- AN-C-159Cation traces on the Metrosep C 4 - 250/2.0 column after Inline Preconcentration with matrix elimination
Intelligent Inline Preconcentration with Inline Matrix Elimination (MiPCT-ME) is used for trace determination of the six standard cations in addition to zinc and diethylamine. The analysis is completed within 24 minutes on the Metrosep C 4 - 250/2.0 Microbore column. The recovery rates are in excess of 95%. The detection limits calculated with the MagIC Net software are in the lower ng/L range for a preconcentration volume of 4 mL.
- AN-C-160Calcium in Bayer caustic soda
In order to extract aluminum from bauxite, the aluminum ore is exposed with a caustic soda solution under pressure in the temperature range of 150 to 200 °C. Dilution and pH value setting are implemented by the addition of 170 mmol/L citric acid prior to calcium determination with ion chromatography in the Bayer caustic soda. Doing so establishes a pH value of 4.5 and prevents precipitation of aluminum hydroxide. The IC separation takes place on the Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 column with a citric acid eluent.
- AN-C-161Trimethylamine N-oxide and biogenic amines in addition to standard cations in white wine
Biogenic amines and trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) are indicators for the quality of grape fermentation. The consumption of amine-rich wines often leads to headaches, which is why the amine concentrations in wine must be monitored. This Application Note describes the determination of trimethylamine N-oxide, putrescine, cadaverine and histamine, in addition to various standard cations, with the aid of the Metrosep C 6 - 100/4.0 column and subsequent direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-162Cationic components in developer solution applying a flow gradient
This Application Note describes the determination of N,N-diethylhydroxylamine (DEHA), triisopropanolamine (TIPA) and a cationic color developing component (CDC) in a developer solution. The analysis is performed on a high-capacity column such as Metrosep C - 250/4.0 with subsequent direct conductivity detection. To reduce the residence time of the strongly retained color developer components, the column flow rate is increased after the elution of the amines.
- AN-C-163Cations in brine with minimal dilution and sub-µL injection
As a rule, brine samples are diluted extremely in order to avoid overloading the column. Manual dilution is very error-prone, which is why this application relies on injection with a 0.25 µL internal loop, thus saving an additional dilution step. Sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium in brine are determined on a Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column with subsequent direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-164Amine analysis in gas scrubber solutions from refineries with direct conductivity detection
In natural gas production, the removal of contaminants, and in particular acidic gases such as H2S and CO2, is exceptionally important. These acidic gases are removed in the amine wash through chemical treatment with amines or alkanol amines. This application shows a convenient and precise analysis with the separation of various amines and standard cations on a column of the Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 type with subsequent direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-165Triethylamine in aqueous 1,3,5-trioxane solution with direct conductivity detection
1,3,5-trioxane is a heterocyclic compound formed by trimerization of formaldehyde. Trioxane is used for the production of polyformaldehyde plastics such as poly(oxymethylene) (POM) and solid fuels. Aqueous 1,3,5-trioxane solutions frequently contain trace triethylamine that requires quantification. This is performed on the Metrosep C 3 - 250/4.0 column with subsequent direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-166Parallel cation (and anion) analysis applying the Metrohm IC Driver 2.0 for Empower
Parallel anion and cation analysis is typically used when both anions and cation have to be analyzed in a sample. Here, the cation part of such an analysis is given. The sample is injected to the cation channel by the injector of the IC instrument bypassing the injector on the 889 IC Sample Center. The whole system is controlled by Empower applying the Metrohm IC Driver 2.0. For anion analysis, see AN-S-350.
- AN-C-167Quality test of an automatic and direct 1:2000 dilution applying Inline Dilution Techique
Automatic dilution reduces manual work and improves the reproducibility and accuracy of the results. So far, the Inline Dilution Technique (MIDT) has been tested in a range of max. 1:100. Using a dedicated sample needle this range is enlarged significantly. This AN shows the performance of an Inline Dilution with a factor of 1:2000 as well as a comparison of manual and inline dilution for a dilution factor of 1:1000.
- AN-C-168Determination of ammonium in tobacco after sulfuric acid extraction
Ammonia is present in tobacco – either naturally or added – and is realesed during smoking. Ammonia increases the appeal of smoking, and is therefore considered to increase the addictive potential. The determination of ammonium in tobacco is performed by acid extraction and ion chromatographic separation followed by non-suppressed conductivity detection.
- AN-C-169Determination of cations in tobacco additives
Tobacco additives may contain cations like ammonium (see AN-C-168) as well as other cations as counter ions of organic acids. These additives include components to retain moisture and flavor of the tobacco. Ammonium is added to increase the appeal of smoking, and is therefore considered to increase the addictive potential. The determination of cations in tobacco additives is performed by ion chromatographic separation followed by non-suppressed conductivity detection.
- AN-C-170N-methyldiethanolamine, piper-azine and standard cations in scrubber solutions
N-methyldiethanolamine and piperazine are used in scrubber solutions, e.g., in the natural gas process. Testing this type of samples by ion chromatography requires a good resolution and the separation of amines from standard cations. The separation is achieved on a Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 column applying direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-171N-methyldiethanolamine and piperazine in scrubber solution
Before the liquefaction process of the natural gas, carbonate and hydrogen sulfide need to be removed through a scrubber solution containing piperazine and N-methyl diethanolamine (MDEA). The concentration ratio of the two components is determined by ion chromatography on a Metrosep C 4 - 150/4.0 column applying direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-172Cations in snow from an open field
Cation content in snow is greatly dependent on sampling site. Samples from remote areas are expected to exhibit lower cation concentrations. This application shows the analysis of a snow sample from an open field in an agricultural zone. Separation is performed on a microbore Metrosep C 6 - 100/2.0 column with direct conductivity detection. The relatively high ammonia content can be explained by animal husbandry in the vicinity of the sampling site.
- AN-C-173Cations in roadside snow
Cation content in snow is greatly dependent on sampling site. Roadside samples are likely to exhibit a high sodium content caused by the use of road salt. This application shows the analysis of a snow sample from a roadside. Separation is performed on a microbore Metrosep C 6 - 250/2.0 column with direct conductivity detection. The 250 mm column was selected due to the large difference in concentrations between sodium and ammonia. This condition enables a baseline separation of the two cations.
- AN-C-174Rapid determination of cations in drinking water on a microbore separation column
Cation analysis in drinking water is a routine task in ion chromatography and can be achieved with a variety of separating columns. The use of a microbore Metrosep C 6 - 250/2.0 column with a high eluent concentration makes it possible to reduce analysis time to less than 12 minutes. Very symmetrical peaks with high sensitivity for the divalent cations are also achieved. Direct conductivity detection is applied.
- AN-C-175Purity of 2-amino-N-(2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)-acetamide by ion chromatography
2-amino-N-(2,2,2-trifluoroethyl)-acetamide is a organic building block for synthesis of pharmaceutical products. Its purity is crucial for the success of the respective synthesis step. 2,2,2-trifluoroethylamine, glycine, and inorganic cations are of interest. Their total peak area is required to be < 2 % of the peak area of all peaks above the reporting level. Separation and quantification is achieved on a Metrosep C 4 - 250/4.0 cation column.
- AN-C-176Melamine in sawdust for animal feed by UV/VIS detection after cation chromatography
Chipped wood and sawdust may be used in production of feed e.g., for ruminants. Melamine, a raw material for resins in wood adhesives, is limited to be used in feed. Therefore, the melamine concentration in sawdust has to be analyzed. Melamine determined after ion chromatographic separation with UV/VIS detection.
- AN-C-177Dicyclohexylamine (DCHA) and methyldicyclohexylamine (MDCHA) in cooling lubricant applying Inline Dialysis
Abrasive machining of e.g., metal parts requires a cooling lubricant. Their purpose besides cooling and lubrication is to inhibit corrosion. Amines are added to the emulsion to keep the pH high. In the actual application, DCHA and MDCHA have to be analyzed besides other amine components and inorganic cations. To avoid oil contamination on the IC system, Inline Dialysis is applied. The detection is performed by direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-178Aspartic acid, glutamic acid, TRIS, sodium, and potassium in cardioplegic solution
A cardioplegic solution protects the ischemic myocardium from cell death. It is applied together with hypothermia e.g. in open heart surgery. Here the simultaneous determination of aspartic acid, glutamic acid, tris(aminomethyl)aminomethane (TRIS), sodium and potassium in such a solution is given. The two amino acids can be determined as they are partially in the triple protonated ammonium form at the eluent pH. Determination is achieved by direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-179Cations and lactic acid in whey powder applying two separation mechanisms in the same analysis
Whey is the remaining liquid after cheese production. It is mainly used as feed. It is also used as dietary supplement as a beverage or in powder form. This application determines lactic acid as well as cations in one determination. The Metrosep C 6 - 250/4.0 column separates sodium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium by ion exchange. It also acts as an ion-exclusion column, which separates lactic acid. Both lactic acid and the cations can be determined in the same run applying direct conductivity detection. While cations typically elute as negative peaks, lactic acid elutes as an early positive peak. MagIC Net shows both in the usual positive direction.
- AN-C-180Bicine in gas sweetening solvent by cation chromatography
Bicine (2-(Bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino)acetic acid) is a corrosive component. It has to be avoided in acidic gas sweetening solvents. These solvents are based on organic amines. Bicine is amphoteric, holding a carboxylic and an amine group. Under the applied conditions, the amine groups are at least partially protonated and therefore may be separated by cation chromatography. The detection mode is direct conductivity detection.
- AN-C-181Potassium in potassium bitartrate as per USP
Within the scope of the USP monograph modernization, potassium is determined in potassium bitartrate applying cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. The USP41 monograph for “Potassium bitartrate” does not yet mention an assay for potassium. The separation is performed on a Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column (L76). The assay of potassium is performed with two commercially available products according to USP definitions. All acceptance criteria are fulfilled.
- AN-C-182Potassium in potassium sodium tartrate as per USP
Within the scope of the USP monograph modernization, potassium is determined in potassium sodium tartrate applying cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. The USP41 monograph for “Potassium sodium tartrate” does not yet mention an assay for potassium. The separation is performed on a Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column (L76). The assay of potassium is performed with two commercially available products according to USP definitions. All acceptance criteria are fulfilled.
- AN-C-183Potassium in potassium bicarbonate effervescent tablets for oral solution
Within the scope of the USP monograph modernization, potassium is determined in potassium bicarbonate effervescent tablets for oral suspension applying cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. The separation is performed on a Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column (L76). All acceptance criteria are fulfilled.
- AN-C-184Potassium and sodium bicarbonates and citric acid effervescent tablets for oral solution
As an alternative to flame photometry, ion chromatography with non-suppressed conductivity detection has been approved by the USP as a validated method to quantify potassium and sodium content in potassium and sodium bicarbonates and citric acid effervescent tablets for oral solution. The present IC method has been validated according to USP General Chapter <621>.
- AN-C-185Potassium in potassium bicarbonate and potassium chloride effervescent tablets for oral solution
As an alternative to flame photometry, ion chromatography with non-suppressed conductivity detection has been approved by the USP as a validated method to quantify potassium content in potassium bicarbonate and potassium chloride effervescent tablets for oral solution. The Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column (L76) provides the required separation of potassium and magnesium. The present IC method has been validated according to USP General Chapter <621>.
- AN-C-186Sodium in potassium sodium tartrate as per USP
Within the scope of the USP monograph modernization, sodium is determined in potassium sodium tartrate applying cation chromatography with direct conductivity detection. The USP41 monograph for «Potassium sodium tartrate» does not yet mention an assay for sodium. The separation is performed on a Metrosep C 6 - 150/4.0 column (L76). The assay of potassium is performed with two commercially available products according to USP definitions. All acceptance criteria are fulfilled. See AN-C-182 for the respective determination of potassium. Apllying this method allows to determine sodium and potassium simultaneously according to USP.
- AN-C-187UOP 939-96: Basic Nitrogen in LPG by Ion Chromatography
Natural liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) is a mixture of hydrocarbon gases (e.g. propane and butane), but it also contains acidic contaminants (e.g. carbon dioxide or hydrogen sulfide). These gases need to be scrubbed from the petroleum gas as they are highly corrosive. This purification step, referred to as «sweetening», is often performed by using alkaline amine solutions. Thereby the amine solution absorbs the acidic gases, while the raw LPG is neutralized. To guarantee that amine residues in the sweetened gas do not influence the gas quality, the amines in the final LPG are determined by scrubbing the gas with acetic acid as described in UOP 936-96. The recent method enables the quantification of the amines dimethylamine (DMA), diethylamine (DEA), dipropylamine (DPA), and dibutylamine (DBA) by separation from standard cations.
- AN-C-188Ammonium impurities in potassium bitartrate
Potassium bitartrate for pharmaceutical use must comply with USP requirements. The actual monograph (USP 42) uses a colorimetric method for the determination of ammonium impurities. Ion chromatography allows the measurement in a single determination under the same conditions used for the potassium assay (see AN-C-181). In the course of the USP monograph modernization, this ion chromatographic approach makes this type of analysis even easier.
- AN-C-189Cations in lithium ore
The exploration and processing of lithium ores is gaining importance with the growing demand for lithium hydroxide. Lithium hydroxide is a key component in the manufacturing of rechargeable batteries for use in various applications including electric vehicles, home storage systems, power tools and consumer electronics. To ensure the efficiency for advanced processing of high purity lithium hydroxide, a fast and reliable quantitative detection technique is required. This application has been developed to monitor the lithium, sodium, and calcium content in the lithium processing samples and mineral concentrates.
- AN-C-190Analysis of amine emulsifiers besides standard cations
Isopropylamine and dicyclohexylamine are used as emulsifiers and need to be determined in emulsions along with standard cations. However, emulsions must not be injected directly into the ion chromatograph as the organic components may damage the ion exchanger stationary phase in the separation column. Inline Dialysis as sample preparation is the perfect tool for such samples. The ions of interest are separated from the organic phase by diffusion through the hydrophilic membrane, thus protecting the column. Full automation makes the analyses even easier and more efficient for the user.
- AN-C-191Sodium in lanthanum acetate
Lanthanum (La) is a transition metal which oxidizes easily in air to lanthanum(III) oxide. This oxide, as well as salts resulting from its dissolution in acid and recrystallization, is a component of different catalysts. Here, a lanthanum(III) acetate solution prepared by dissolution of lanthanum(III) oxide in acetic acid, has to be tested for a sodium contamination. The high concentration of La3+ is complexed by the dipicolinic acid in the eluent and forms anionic complexes. These complexes are eluted in the front and therefore do not interfere with the sodium impurity as well as other cations such as ammonium and calcium.
- AN-C-192Cations in sodium rich wastewater
Wastewaters often contain high loads of sodium, making the determination of minor cations quite a challenge. In the present wastewater study, the determination of lithium, ammonium, zinc, strontium, and barium is requested. If the sodium concentration exceeds 2 g/L, this negatively influences the peak shape of closely eluting peaks. Applying a appropriate dilution factor to the sample enables the quantification of minor cations. Therefore zinc and barium can be properly quantified with a dilution ratio of 1:2, while lithium and ammonium require minimum dilution factors of at least 1:10 and 1:100, respectively.
- AN-C-193Alkyl amines in scrubber solutions
Harmful industrial flue gases like H2S and CO2 cause corrosion of pipes and damage the environment. Adding the correct amount of amines in scrubber solutions, e.g. ethanolamines and methylamines, will neutralize these gases («gas sweetening»). Non-suppressed cation analysis with direct conductivity detection is a straightforward and robust technique for the quantification of monoethanolamine (MEA), diethanolamine (DEA), triethanolamine (TEA), monomethylamine (MMA), dimethylamine (DMA), and trimethylamine (TMA) via ion chromatography. Thanks to the high capacity of the Metrosep C 6 column, large volumes can be injected without compromising the peak shapes. The analytical technique can be used at laboratory scale but also for process analysis.
- AN-C-194IC Assays for Calcium and Magnesium according to USP
Calcium carbonate has a wide applicability in the pharmaceutical industry as an excipient and also as an active ingredient, and in the food industry as a major dietary supplement. The U.S. Pharmacopoeia (USP) monographs for calcium and magnesium carbonates tablets as well as calcium carbonate and magnesia chewable tablets currently describe manual titration as the assay procedure for calcium and magnesium. The USP has embarked on a global initiative to modernize many of the existing monographs across all compendia. In response to this initiative, two alternative analytical methods were developed to determine the analytes calcium and magnesium. This Application Note presents ion chromatography (IC) procedures using conductivity detection that provide better accuracy and specificity and are suitable for the intended purpose. These validated IC methods (according to USP General Chapter <1225>) offer a significant improvement to the existing assays because they can simultaneously determine both analytes calcium and magnesium, saving both time and effort.
- AN-C-195Cation quantification with increased performance using microbore IC
Microbore ion chromatography offers better sensitivity, shorter retention times, and consumes less eluent, increasing sample throughput and reducing running costs.
- AN-C-196Purity quantification of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS) with IC
Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (TRIS) is often used in life science applications and its purity must be monitored. This analysis is possible with ion chromatography.
- AN-C-197Potassium assay in potassium citrate and citric acid oral solution
Potassium citrate and citric acid oral solutions act as systemic alkalizers. Potassium assays, validated per USP <621> and <1225>, use IC with L76 cation-exchange columns.
- AN-C-198Calcium acetate assay in calcium acetate capsules
The assay of calcium acetate, often used as a phosphate binder for dialysis patients, can be performed with ion chromatography (IC) as per USP <621> and <1225>.
- AN-CIC-001Halogens in high-viscosity oils using Combustion IC
Determination of chloride and sulfate (non-quantified) in a high-viscosity oil sample using combustion digestion and subsequent anion chromatography with conductivity detection following sequential suppression.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-002Halogens and sulfur in residual solvent using Combustion IC
Determination of fluoride, chloride, bromide and sulfate in residual solvent using combustion digestion as sample preparation and subsequent anion chromatography with conductivity detection following sequential suppression. The analysis is significant for use in dividing waste products into non-halogenated and halogenated solvents.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-003Chlorine, bromine and sulfur in low-density polyethylene (ERM®-EC680k) using Combustion IC
The determination of halogens and sulfur in waste products is important. The inline combination of the Mitsubishi Combustion Module with the Metrohm IC is a suitable method for this type of samples. The recovery rates are analyzed with a certified reference material, e.g., a low-density polyethylene (LDPE).Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-004Total and leachable concentration of halogens and sulfur in latex gloves using Combustion Ion Chromatography and a leaching test
Latex gloves are used in clean room environments in order to prevent contaminations. The use of gloves that release corrosive halogenides or sulfate is forbidden in nuclear power plants. The total content of halogen and sulfur is determined by means of Combustion Ion Chromatography. An eluate test is carried out to check the elutable percentage of halogens and sulfate from gloves. Sample preparation is comprised of preconcentration and matrix elimination (MiPCT-ME), as described in AN-S-304.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-005Iodine in a pharmaceutical product using Combustion Ion Chromatography with Inline Matrix Elimination
The iodine content in numerous iodized X-ray contrast media (ICM) is around 50% and is determined with great accuracy using Combustion Ion Chromatography. Large quantities of H2O2 (1,000 mg/L) are required for complete absorption of the iodine. Similarly, the concentration of the internal standard should be 50 mg/L. The water content of the X-ray contrast media is determined by means of Metrohm's Karl Fischer oven method and incorporated in the final calculation.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-006Recovery rates of chloride, bromide and sulfate in certified reference materials using Metrohm Combustion Ion Chromatography
Combustion Ion Chromatography combines pro-hydrolytic sample combustion and the absorption of emerging combustion gases in an oxidizing, aqueous solution that is then channeled to an ion chromatograph for the analysis of halogenides and sulfur (as sulfate). The combustion and analysis of the certified reference materials (ZRM) makes clear the reliability of Metrohm Combustion Ion Chromatography.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-007Analysis of a standard mixed in liquid using Metrohm Combustion IC
This application describes the determination of fluoride, chloride, bromide and sulfur (as sulfate) in an ethanol standard solution with halo organic (4-halogen benzoic acids; F, Cl and Br) and sulfur organic compounds (3-(Cyclohexylamino)-1-propanesulfonic acid) by means of Metrohm Combustion Ion Chromatography with flame sensor and Inline Matrix Elimination.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-008Fluorine in polyisobutene using Metrohm Combustion IC
Polyisobutene (PIB) is an important raw material for a large range of products. Quality control requires the determination of the fluorine content. This task is easily done by Metrohm Combustion IC applying flame sensor technology and Inline Matrix Elimination.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-009Chloride and sulfur in cyclohexane using Metrohm Combustion IC
Cyclohexane is an important organic solvent. Recycled cyclohexane must be tested for trace substances, e.g., chloride and sulfate. Metrohm Combustion Ion Chromatography with flame sensor and Inline Matrix Elimination is the method of choice.Keyword: pyrohydrolysis
- AN-CIC-010Halogens in a polymer sample applying Metrohm Combustion IC according to IEC 60754
The Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive (RoHS) requires to reduce the halogen content in several organic materials used in electrical and electronic equipment. In this context, there is a huge interest for using halogen-free polymers. To check for halogens in polymers according to standard IEC 60754, Metrohm Combustion IC applying flame sensor technology and Inline Matrix Elimination is an indispensable method. The examined polymeric material contains halogens at a level of up to 1%.