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Quantification of naphthalenes in jet fuel with GC×GC/Tri‐PLS and windowed rank minimization retention time alignment
Author(s) -
Johnson Kevin J.,
Prazen Bryan J.,
Young Donald C.,
Synovec Robert E.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
journal of separation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.72
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1615-9314
pISSN - 1615-9306
DOI - 10.1002/jssc.200301640
Subject(s) - partial least squares regression , chemistry , calibration , gas chromatography , replicate , chromatography , kovats retention index , retention time , chemometrics , analytical chemistry (journal) , rank (graph theory) , jet fuel , gas chromatography–mass spectrometry , mathematics , mass spectrometry , statistics , organic chemistry , combinatorics
Comprehensive, two‐dimensional gas chromatography (GC×GC) is used in conjunction with trilinear partial least squares (Tri‐PLS) to quantify the percent weight of naphthalenes (two‐ring aromatic compounds) in jet fuel samples. The increased peak capacity and selectivity of GC×GC makes the technique attractive for the rapid, and possibly less tedious analysis of jet fuel. The analysis of complex mixtures by GC×GC is further enhanced through the use of chemometric techniques, including those designed for use on 2‐D data such as Tri‐PLS. Unfortunately, retention time variation, unless corrected, can be an impediment to chemometric analysis. Previous work has demonstrated that the effects of retention time variation can be mitigated in sub‐regions of GC×GC chromatograms through the application of an objective retention time alignment algorithm based on rank minimization. Building upon this previous work, it is demonstrated here that the effects of retention time variation can be mitigated throughout an entire GC×GC chromatogram with an objective retention time alignment algorithm based on windowed rank minimization alignment. A significant decrease in calibration error is observed when the algorithm is applied to chromatograms prior to construction of Tri‐PLS models. Fourteen jet fuel samples with known weight percentages of naphthalenes (ASTM D1840) were obtained. Each sample was subjected to five replicate five‐minute GC×GC separations over a period of two days. A subset of nine samples spanning the range of weight percentages of naphthalenes was chosen as a calibration set and Tri‐PLS calibration models were subsequently developed in order to predict the naphthalene content of the samples from the GC×GC chromatograms of the remaining five samples. Calibration models constructed from GC×GC chromatograms that were retention time corrected are shown to exhibit a root mean square error of prediction of roughly half that of calibration models constructed from uncorrected chromatograms. The error of prediction is lowered further to a value that nearly matches the uncertainty in the standard percent weight values (ca. 1% of the median percent volume value) when the aligned chromatograms are truncated to include only regions of the chromatogram populated by naphthalenes and compounds of similar polarity and boiling point.