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GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY SAMPLES & SAMPLE PREPARATION TECHNIQUES

Date

Training Time

Training Duration

Training Cost (USD)

11TH August, 2026
1830-2000 HRS (EAT)
1.5 Hours

$30

GC Samples & Sample Preparation · modern course
In GC, the sample is already part of the separation: if it’s not volatile, clean, and compatible, it never reaches the column.
GC ANALYSTS CHROMATOGRAPHY KNOWLEDGE SAMPLE PREP FOCUS ISO 17025
  • Designed for: analysts, lab technicians, and method developers who prepare samples for GC analysis
  • Applicable to food, environmental, pharmaceutical, and biological laboratories
  • Prerequisite: basic understanding of gas chromatography
  • Familiarity with sample handling and quality concepts is beneficial
Learning outcomes
  • Select appropriate GC sample preparation techniques based on analyte and matrix
  • Prevent losses, degradation, and discrimination of volatile compounds
  • Prepare GC samples that meet ISO 17025 traceability and documentation requirements

GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY SAMPLES AND SAMPLE PREPARATION TECHNIQUES

LIVE ONLINE INTERACTIVE SESSION · volatility, cleanliness, compatibility

From collection to injection: this course covers the critical role of sample preparation in GC. Learn to master extraction, clean‑up, derivatization, and storage techniques – ensuring your samples are truly ready for the column and compliant with ISO 17025.

1. ROLE OF SAMPLE PREPARATION IN GC ANALYSIS
  • Why GC sample preparation is critical: volatility, thermal stability, injection discrimination, matrix interference, column contamination, measurement uncertainty
  • Relevant ISO/IEC 17025 clauses: handling of test items, ensuring validity of results, technical competence, control of records
2. NATURE OF GC SAMPLES AND ANALYTES
Types of GC‑amenable analytes
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs), semi‑volatile organic compounds (SVOCs), permanent gases, FAMEs, pesticides, hydrocarbons
Sample matrices commonly analyzed by GC
  • Air/gas, water/wastewater, food/beverages, oils/fats, soils/sediments, biological fluids
Analyte properties affecting GC analysis
  • Boiling point, polarity, thermal stability, reactivity
3. SAMPLE COLLECTION AND PRESERVATION FOR GC
  • Sampling strategies: grab vs composite, static vs dynamic air sampling, representativeness
  • Sample containers and materials: glass vs polymer, adsorption/permeation risks, headspace compatibility
  • Preservation techniques: temperature control, chemical preservatives, headspace minimization
  • (Online sampling error case studies)
4. SAMPLE EXTRACTION TECHNIQUES FOR GC
Liquid‑Liquid Extraction (LLE)
  • Principles, solvent selection, phase separation, emulsion control
Solid‑Liquid Extraction (SLE)
  • Soxhlet, pressurized liquid extraction (PLE), ultrasonic extraction
Solid‑Phase Extraction (SPE)
  • Sorbent selection, breakthrough/recovery, elution solvent compatibility
Headspace Sampling
  • Static headspace, dynamic headspace (purge‑and‑trap), equilibration parameters
Solid‑Phase Microextraction (SPME)
  • Fiber chemistry selection, extraction kinetics, carryover considerations
5. SAMPLE CLEAN‑UP AND MATRIX REMOVAL
  • Need for clean‑up: column/detector protection, baseline stability, S/N improvement
  • Clean‑up techniques: GPC, Florisil/silica/alumina, sulfur/lipid removal
  • Matrix effects and recovery bias: co‑extractives, loss of volatile analytes
6. DERIVATIZATION TECHNIQUES FOR GC
  • Why derivatization is needed: improve volatility, thermal stability, detector response
  • Types: silylation, acylation, alkylation (e.g., methylation)
  • Derivatization protocol design: reaction conditions, reagent purity, by‑product control
  • (Virtual derivatization decision exercise)
7. GC INJECTION TECHNIQUE CONSIDERATIONS
  • Injection modes: split, splitless, on‑column, PTV
  • Injection solvent compatibility: solvent boiling point effects, solvent focusing
  • Discrimination and volatile losses: needle discrimination, liner selection
8. INTERNAL STANDARDS AND QUALITY CONTROL
  • Internal standard selection: chemical similarity, volatility matching
  • Surrogates and recovery standards: purpose and interpretation
  • Matrix‑matched calibration: when required, implementation challenges
9. STABILITY, STORAGE, AND HOLDING TIMES
  • Analyte stability in extracts: solvent effects, temperature/light sensitivity
  • Extract storage and reanalysis: freeze‑thaw effects, extract holding times
10. ISO 17025 DOCUMENTATION AND TRACEABILITY
  • Sample preparation records: extraction logs, solvent/reagent traceability, analyst and date/time
  • Method deviations and justification: controlled deviations, impact assessment
  • Measurement uncertainty from sample preparation: recovery variability, volatile losses
11. COMMON NON‑CONFORMITIES IN GC SAMPLE PREPARATION
  • Unvalidated derivatization steps
  • Volatile loss due to poor storage
  • Incompatible injection solvents
  • Missing recovery data
12. ONLINE PRACTICAL COMPONENT
  • Virtual GC sample prep labs: choosing between headspace, SPME, and LLE
  • Designing a derivatization protocol
  • Diagnosing recovery losses
  • Sample integrity audit simulation

Extraction & clean‑up Derivatization
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