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Thermo Scientific Charged Aerosol Detectors

Brochures and specifications | 2018 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
HPLC
Industries
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The accurate and universal quantification of analytes in complex mixtures remains a fundamental challenge in liquid chromatography. Traditional detectors such as UV/Vis and mass spectrometers exhibit limitations: UV detection requires a chromophore and yields variable responses, and MS demands gas-phase ionization. Charged aerosol detection (CAD) offers near-universal response for non-volatile and many semi-volatile species, delivering consistent sensitivity and enabling reliable quantitation—even when specific standards are unavailable.

Objectives and Study Overview


This whitepaper introduces the principles and advantages of Thermo Scientific Charged Aerosol Detectors, and demonstrates their application across diverse fields including pharmaceuticals, biopharmaceuticals, food and beverage, and environmental analysis. Key goals are to show how CAD can reveal hidden peaks, provide uniform response, and simplify quantitation using a single calibrant.

Methodology


Charged aerosol detection proceeds in three main steps:
  • Nebulization: The LC eluent is converted into fine droplets and evaporated to form analyte particles.
  • Charging: A corona charger imparts charge to dried particles via collision with charged nitrogen ions; the charge magnitude correlates with particle size.
  • Detection: Charged particles are collected on an electrometer, yielding a signal proportional to analyte mass.
CAD response is largely independent of analyte structure, enabling uniform calibration. For gradient elution, an inverse-gradient approach using a dual-pump UHPLC system maintains constant mobile phase composition at the detector, preserving response uniformity.

Used Instrumentation


  • Thermo Scientific Vanquish Charged Aerosol Detector
  • Thermo Scientific Corona Veo Charged Aerosol Detector
  • Vanquish and UltiMate 3000 LC/UHPLC systems
  • Multi-detector configurations combining CAD, diode array UV, and mass spectrometry
  • Chromeleon Chromatography Data System for automated method setup and inverse-gradient control

Results and Discussion


CAD demonstrated uniform response (<5 % RSD) for over 18 reference compounds at sub-microgram levels, revealing analytes undetected by UV or MS. In pharmaceutical impurity testing, CAD enabled single-calibrant quantitation of APIs and impurities. Biopharma applications included label-free glycan profiling and surfactant quantitation. In food and beverage, CAD characterized triacylglycerol patterns for oil authenticity and sugar profiles in juices. Environmental examples showed detection of polymer additives at low ppb in water.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Universal detection of non-volatile compounds with high sensitivity and wide dynamic range
  • Single-calibrant quantitation of multiple analytes when individual standards are unavailable
  • Seamless integration into existing LC platforms with minimal method adjustments
  • Compatibility with multi-detector workflows for comprehensive sample characterization

Future Trends and Opportunities


Ongoing developments are expected in micro- and nano-flow CAD interfaces, enhanced software automation for inverse-gradient and multi-detector coordination, and expanded applications in metabolomics, polymer analysis, and environmental monitoring. Integration with high-resolution MS and data analytics will further broaden the utility of CAD in discovery and QA/QC workflows.

Conclusion


Charged aerosol detection transforms LC analysis by providing near-universal, structure-independent response and robust quantitation capabilities. Its versatility across analytical domains makes CAD an essential tool for laboratories seeking deeper insight into complex samples and simplified workflows.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

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