Characterization of Nano-Gravimetric-Detector Response and Application to Petroleum Fluids up to C34

Anal Chem. 2020 Dec 15;92(24):15845-15853. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.0c03157. Epub 2020 Nov 24.

Abstract

A nano-gravimetric detector (NGD) for gas chromatography is based on a nanoelectromechanical array of adsorbent-coated resonating double clamped beams. NGD is a concentration-sensitive detector and its sensitivity is analyte-dependent based on the affinity of the analyte with the porous layer coated on the NEMS surface. This affinity is also strongly related to the NGD temperature (NGD working temperature can be dynamically set up from 40 to 220 °C), so the sensitivity can be tuned through temperature detector control. An adsorption-desorption model was set up to characterize the NGD response on a large set of n-alkanes from C10 to C22 at different NGD temperatures. For fast identification of petroleum mixture based on chromatogram fingerprint, a general strategy for NGD temperature program design was developed leading to a constant relative response factor between 0.96 and 1.03 for all the alkanes, and then chromatograms are very similar to those obtained with a flame ionization detector (FID). The analysis of a real petroleum fluid was also performed and compared to FID results: quantitative results obtained for all the analytes were satisfactory according to precision (<5%) and accuracy (average relative error = 4.3%). Based on such temperature control strategy, NGD sensitivity and the dynamic linear range can be adjusted and detection limits at a picogram level can be easily achieved for all n-alkanes.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't