Gas Chromatography & GC-MS Applications: What Can GC-MS Analyze?
Top Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS) UsesGas Chromatography (GC) is one of the most powerful and widely used analytical techniques for separating, identifying, and quantifying volatile and semi-volatile compounds in complex mixtures. GC serves critical analytical roles across the pharmaceutical, chemical, environmental, food and beverage, petroleum, forensic, and plastics industries. For companies seeking gas chromatography analysis at a US-based testing lab, Infinita Lab provides comprehensive analytical chemistry services through its accredited laboratory network.
How Gas Chromatography Works
A sample is vaporized and carried by an inert gas (helium, nitrogen, or hydrogen) through a long, narrow column coated with a stationary phase. Different compounds interact with the stationary phase at different rates, causing them to separate and elute from the column at characteristic retention times. Detectors at the column exit identify and quantify each separated compound, producing a chromatogram of peaks proportional to component concentrations.
Common GC Detector Types
Flame Ionization Detector (FID)
FID provides excellent sensitivity for organic compounds and is the most widely used GC detector for hydrocarbon analysis, residual solvent testing, and pharmaceutical impurity screening in the chemical and pharmaceutical industries.
Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS)
GC-MS combines chromatographic separation with mass spectral identification, providing definitive compound identification through molecular fragmentation patterns. It is the gold standard for environmental contaminant analysis, forensic toxicology, and the identification of unknown substances.
Thermal Conductivity Detector (TCD)
TCD detects all compounds, including permanent gases, and is used for gas purity analysis, process gas monitoring, and applications that require measuring both organic and inorganic gas components.
Industry Applications
GC applications include pharmaceutical residual solvent analysis (USP <467>), environmental VOC and SVOC analysis (EPA Methods 8260/8270), petroleum and fuel composition analysis (ASTM D2887), food and beverage flavor and contaminant analysis, polymer additive and degradation product identification, and forensic drug and toxicology screening.
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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
What does gas chromatography analyze? GC separates, identifies, and quantifies volatile and semi-volatile organic compounds in gas, liquid, and solid samples. Applications range from pharmaceutical purity to environmental contamination to petroleum composition analysis.
What is the difference between GC-FID and GC-MS? GC-FID provides excellent sensitivity for quantifying organic compounds. GC-MS adds mass spectral identification capability for definitive compound identification. GC-MS is preferred when unknown identification is required.
What ASTM standards apply to gas chromatography? ASTM D2887 (boiling range distribution of petroleum), ASTM D6420 (individual gaseous compounds), ASTM E1618 (ignitable liquid residues), and ASTM D3606 (benzene and toluene in gasoline) are key GC standards.
Can GC analyze non-volatile compounds? Standard GC requires compounds to be volatile enough to vaporize. Non-volatile compounds can be analyzed after chemical derivatization or by using pyrolysis-GC, which thermally decomposes samples before chromatographic analysis.
What industries rely most heavily on GC analysis? Pharmaceutical (residual solvents, impurities), environmental (VOCs, SVOCs), petroleum (composition, quality), food/beverage (flavors, contaminants), forensic (drugs, accelerants), and chemical manufacturing industries all rely extensively on GC analysis.