Anylising Substances

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Chemistry (Atomic Structure, Analysis and Quantitative Chemistry) Note on Anylising Substances, created by lmg719 on 05/05/2013.
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Note by lmg719, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by lmg719 over 11 years ago
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ubstances can be analysed using a variety of methods including paper chromatography, gas chromatography and mass spectrometry.

Methods of AnalysisChemists can use many different methods to analyse substances.Some methods rely on chemical analysis, while others rely on machines.

Paper ChromatographyPaper chromatography is used to analyse coloured substances, such as the coloured pigments in plants and artificial colours used as food additives.Paper chromatography works because some of the coloured substances are better at dissolving in the liquid than they are at bonding with the paper, so they travel further up the paper.

Instrumental Methods of analysisInstrumental methods of analysis rely on machines.There are several different types of instrumental analysis.Some are suitable for detecting and identifying elements, while others are better suited to compounds.In general, instrumental methods of analysis are: Fast Accurate (they reliably identify elements and compounds) Sensitive (they can detect very small amounts of a substance in a small amount of sample)

Gas chromatography (GC) and mass spectrometry (MS) are two instrumental methods of analysis.They can be linked together as GC-MS to allow substances in a sample to be separated, then identified.You need to have a basic understanding of how gas chromatography works.

Gas ChromatographyGas chromatography allows a mixture of compounds to be separated.The GC machine consists of a long glass tube packed with a powdered solid material, which is fitted into an oven.The tube is called the column, even though it is usually wound into a coil so that it fits into the oven. The sample is dissolved in a solvent, then injected into one end of the column. An unreactive gas - usually nitrogen - carries the sample through the column. Different substances in the sample travel through the column at different speeds and so become separated from each other. The separated substances leave the column one after the other. As they leave, they are detected by a detector.

The time taken for a substance to travel through the column is called itsretention time. A detector produces a graph where each substance is represented by a peak: The number of peaks shows the number of compounds present in the sample The position of each peak shows the retention time for each compound

Mass spectrometry A mass spectrometer is able to identify substances very quickly and accurately. It can detect very small amounts. If a GC machine is linked to a mass spectrometer, this combined GC-MS method allows the separated substances leaving the column of the GC machine to be detected.

Analysis

Instrumental Methods

GC-MS

Mass Spectronomy

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