LCMS
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike

Acclaim® Explosives Columns - Manual

Manuals | 2011 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Consumables, LC columns
Industries
Homeland Security
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Environmental and forensic analyses of explosive residues require precise, reproducible separation of a complex mixture of nitroaromatic, nitramine and nitrate ester compounds. EPA Method 8330 defines 14 target explosives that demand baseline resolution for accurate quantitation.

Objectives and Overview


This manual introduces the Acclaim Explosives E1 and E2 reversed‐phase silica columns specifically designed for EPA 8330 analysis. It outlines procedures for installation, conditioning, chromatographic optimization, routine care, and real‐sample applications.

Methodology


  • Mobile phase: methanol and deionized water. E1 typically uses 43–46% methanol; E2 uses 48–52% methanol.
  • Column conditioning: flush new column with pure methanol (~20 volumes), then equilibrate with analytical mobile phase (~20 volumes).
  • Chromatographic optimization: adjust mobile phase ratio and column temperature (25–35 °C) to refine selectivity and resolution.
  • Sample handling: filter and, when needed, use guard columns to protect analytical column.
  • Storage and cleaning: store long‐term in pure organic solvent; wash with organic and aqueous mixtures before reuse.

Used Instrumentation


  • Standard HPLC or RSLC system with binary pump or proportioning valve.
  • Column oven capable of 25–40 °C control.
  • UV detector set at 254 nm (spectrum scanning optional).
  • Autosampler with capacity for guard and analytical columns.
  • Mass spectrometer interface for 2.1 mm i.d. and sub‐2 µm formats in LC/MS workflows.

Main Results and Discussion


  • Acclaim E1 achieves baseline separation of all 14 EPA 8330 targets with C18‐like selectivity; optimal at ~43–45% methanol and ~30 °C.
  • Acclaim E2 provides complementary retention, enhanced separation of nitrate esters (PETN, EGDN), and similarly baseline resolves all targets; optimal at ~48–52% methanol and ~30 °C.
  • Particle sizes: 5 µm for standard HPLC; 3 µm (3×150 mm or 3×250 mm) for accelerated or high‐resolution methods; 2.2 µm RSLC (2.1×100 mm, 2.1×150 mm, 3×100 mm) for ultra‐high throughput and LC/MS compatibility.
  • Example applications demonstrate threefold runtime reduction for EPA8330A and high‐resolution separations on longer columns, with peak capacities above EPA requirements.

Benefits and Practical Application


  • True baseline resolution of all target compounds simplifies calibration and quantitation.
  • E1/E2 complementarity supports primary and confirmatory EPA8330 analyses without changing stationary phase chemistry.
  • Multiple formats adapt to high throughput, solvent savings, or LC/MS detection needs.
  • Guard column options in original and V2 series extend analytical column life and improve robustness for real samples.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


  • Expansion of sub‐2 µm RSLC formats and ultra-high pressure systems for further runtime reductions.
  • Direct coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry for enhanced specificity and sensitivity.
  • Development of greener mobile phases and automated method optimization to reduce solvent usage and operator effort.
  • Portable or field-deployable HPLC platforms leveraging these columns for on-site environmental and forensic screening.

Conclusion


The Acclaim Explosives E1 and E2 columns deliver robust, complementary selectivity and baseline resolution for all 14 EPA Method 8330 targets. Their versatile formats—from conventional 5 µm HPLC to sub‐2 µm RSLC—enable fast, high‐resolution, and LC/MS‐compatible workflows. In combination with simple mobile phases, temperature control and guard columns, these products offer reliable, reproducible performance in environmental, forensic and industrial explosive analyses.

Reference


Not provided

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

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Automated Solid Phase Extraction of 14 Explosives in Tap Water Based on U.S. EPA Method 8330 Using Hydrophilic Reversed-Phase Cartridge Followed by HPLC with UV Detection
Appli cat i on N ote 1 0 8 6 Automated Solid Phase Extraction of 14 Explosives in Tap Water Based on U.S. EPA Method 8330 Using Hydrophilic Reversed-Phase Cartridge Followed by HPLC with UV Detection Jing Hong and Rosanne…
Key words
hrphs, hrphsspe, spesolex, solextetryl, tetrylhmx, hmxrdx, rdxclosures, closuresdionex, dionexnitrobenzene, nitrobenzenecartridge, cartridgewaste, wastearmament, armamentmunitions, munitionsrosanne, rosanneslingsby
Separation of Explosives in EPA 8330: Column Choices Optimize Speed, Resolu- tion, and Solvent Use
Separation of Explosives in EPA 8330: Column Choices Optimize Speed, Resolution, and Solvent Use Application Environmental Authors John W. Henderson Jr. and William J. Long Agilent Technologies, Inc. 2850 Centerville Road Wilmington, DE 19808-1610 USA Abstract ZORBAX Extend-C18 columns separate…
Key words
tnt, tntmau, mautetryl, tetrylhmx, hmxrdx, rdxrrht, rrhtexplosive, explosiveresolution, resolutiontime, timeselectivity, selectivitycyclotetramethylene, cyclotetramethylenetetranitramine, tetranitraminetrinitramine, trinitraminecyclotrimethylene, cyclotrimethylenekinghorn
New Technology for Environmental Assays – Improve Resolution, Run More Samples at Lower Cost
New Technology for Environmental Assays – Improve Resolution, Run More Samples at Lower Cost Pittcon 2008 Group/Presentation Title Agilent Restricted Month ##, 200X Introduction – What are Some Issues with Typical Environmental HPLC Assays? Lots of analytes need to be…
Key words
title, titlepresentation, presentationrestricted, restrictedgroup, groupmau, mauagilent, agilentbenzo, benzomin, minwater, wateracetonitrile, acetonitrilefluoranthene, fluoranthenepyrene, pyrenemobile, mobilephase, phaseresolution
Using Peak Deconvolution of Photodiode Array Data to Attain Faster, Easier Performance of EPA Method 8330B
No. SSI-HPLC-023 High Performance Liquid Chromatography No. HPLC-023 Using Peak Deconvolution of Photodiode Array Data to Attain Faster, Easier Performance of EPA Method 8330B ■ Introduction Explosive ordinance and its residues can be found throughout the globe, not just at…
Key words
tetryl, tetrylpetn, petnhmx, hmxrdx, rdxdeconvolution, deconvolutionphotodiode, photodiodesimilarity, similarityordinance, ordinancespectral, spectralindex, indexarray, arrayconfirmation, confirmationpeaks, peaksperformance, performanceelution
Other projects
GCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike