z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
A Strategy for GC/MS Quantification of Polar Compounds via their Silylated Surrogates: Silylation and Quantification of Biological Amino Acids
Author(s) -
Marco Guida,
Maria Michela Salvatore,
Francesco Salvatore
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of analytical and bioanalytical techniques
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2155-9872
DOI - 10.4172/2155-9872.1000263
Subject(s) - silylation , analyte , calibration , chemistry , sample preparation , standard addition , calibration curve , chromatography , biological system , detection limit , organic chemistry , mathematics , statistics , biology , catalysis
Substitution of polar functionalized compounds with silylated (e.g., trimethylsilylated) surrogates prior to GC/ MS analysis is a widely used analytical strategy. Calibration is a most demanding step of this strategy. In fact, a calibration function is usually acquired by converting known amounts of the pure analyte to its silylated surrogate using the same conditions employed for processing unknown samples. The cumbersome need of acquiring a new calibration function prevents, to a large extend, the possibility of modifying silylation and instrumental settings on a sample by sample basis as would be appropriate in a number of cases. The modified standard additions calibration method, suggested in this paper, overcomes this difficulty by integrating in a single analytical procedure calibration and sample analysis. Furthermore, the suggested procedure compensates for matrix effects which may be a serious source of inaccuracy and is a tool that can be used during method development in order to find the most suitable silylation conditions for a given analyte. The implementation and benefits of the modified standard additions calibration method are explored in this paper on the basis of a symbolic but enlightening experiment dealing with the very representative GC/MS quantification of biological amino acids via their trimethylsilylated derivatives

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here