Comparison of suppressed to nonsuppressed conductivity detection for the determination of common inorganic cations
Technical notes | 2018 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The analysis of common inorganic cations (Li+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+) is vital across environmental, industrial, and quality-control laboratories. Ion chromatography (IC) with conductivity detection remains a cornerstone technique due to its selectivity, sensitivity, and throughput. Two primary detection modes—suppressed and nonsuppressed conductivity—offer distinct advantages and limitations. This comparison elucidates their relative performance for routine cation determination and guides optimal method selection.
This study aims to compare suppressed and nonsuppressed conductivity detection for six common inorganic cations using:
Suppressed system conditions:
• Baseline noise: suppressed <0.5 nS vs nonsuppressed 5–10 nS.
• Signal-to-noise (S/N): suppressed ~620 vs nonsuppressed ~43, giving >10× sensitivity gain.
• Method detection limits (MDLs): suppressed 0.19–2.64 µg/L vs nonsuppressed 2.0–36.6 µg/L.
• Linear dynamic range: suppressed >3 orders of magnitude (up to 1000 mg/L for Na+), quadratic fit for NH4+; nonsuppressed linear up to 3 orders.
• Column capacity effects: high-capacity CS16 tolerates high ionic strength (pH 1 samples, Na+/NH4+ ratios up to 10 000:1) without overloading; SCS 1 overloaded at high salt, causing peak splitting and tailing.
• Eluent options: nonsuppressed required dilute acidic eluents (MSA, tartaric/PDCA) limiting gradients and runtime (>60 min); suppressed supports high-strength eluents, gradients, and rapid separations (<30 min).
Suppressed conductivity detection offers superior sensitivity, broader dynamic range, and resilience to complex matrices and pH extremes. It streamlines workflows via online eluent generation and self-regenerating suppressors. Nonsuppressed detection provides a simpler hardware configuration but at the cost of higher detection limits, limited calibration range, and susceptibility to baseline drift.
Suppressed conductivity detection on a high-capacity CS16 column significantly outperforms nonsuppressed detection in sensitivity, dynamic range, and robustness. For routine and trace inorganic cation analysis—particularly in challenging matrices or requiring broad calibration—suppressed IC is the preferred method. Nonsuppressed detection remains valuable for simpler workflows where lower sensitivity suffices.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Significance of Topic
The analysis of common inorganic cations (Li+, Na+, NH4+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+) is vital across environmental, industrial, and quality-control laboratories. Ion chromatography (IC) with conductivity detection remains a cornerstone technique due to its selectivity, sensitivity, and throughput. Two primary detection modes—suppressed and nonsuppressed conductivity—offer distinct advantages and limitations. This comparison elucidates their relative performance for routine cation determination and guides optimal method selection.
Study Objectives and Overview
This study aims to compare suppressed and nonsuppressed conductivity detection for six common inorganic cations using:
- A high-capacity Thermo Scientific Dionex IonPac CS16 column with suppressed detection on an ICS-2500 RFIC system equipped with an EG50 eluent generator and CSRS ULTRA suppressor.
- A lower-capacity Dionex IonPac SCS 1 column with nonsuppressed detection on an ICS-2000 system.
Methodology
Suppressed system conditions:
- Column: Dionex IonPac CG16 guard + CS16 (5×250 mm)
- Eluent: 26 mM methanesulfonic acid (MSA) generated by EG50
- Suppressor: CSRS ULTRA (4 mm), AutoSuppression recycle mode at 100 mA
- Flow: 1.5 mL/min, temp: 30 °C, inj. vol: 10 µL
- Column: Dionex IonPac SCG 1 guard + SCS 1 (4×250 mm)
- Eluent: 3 mM MSA (manual prep)
- Flow: 1.0 mL/min, temp: 30 °C, inj. vol: 10 µL
Used Instrumentation
- Thermo Scientific Dionex ICS-2500 RFIC system with GP50 pump, EG50 eluent generator, ED50A conductivity detector, AS50 autosampler
- Thermo Scientific Dionex ICS-2000 IC system with dual-piston pump, digital conductivity detector, AS50 autosampler
- Chromeleon Chromatography Workstation for data acquisition and instrument control
Key Findings and Discussion
• Baseline noise: suppressed <0.5 nS vs nonsuppressed 5–10 nS.
• Signal-to-noise (S/N): suppressed ~620 vs nonsuppressed ~43, giving >10× sensitivity gain.
• Method detection limits (MDLs): suppressed 0.19–2.64 µg/L vs nonsuppressed 2.0–36.6 µg/L.
• Linear dynamic range: suppressed >3 orders of magnitude (up to 1000 mg/L for Na+), quadratic fit for NH4+; nonsuppressed linear up to 3 orders.
• Column capacity effects: high-capacity CS16 tolerates high ionic strength (pH 1 samples, Na+/NH4+ ratios up to 10 000:1) without overloading; SCS 1 overloaded at high salt, causing peak splitting and tailing.
• Eluent options: nonsuppressed required dilute acidic eluents (MSA, tartaric/PDCA) limiting gradients and runtime (>60 min); suppressed supports high-strength eluents, gradients, and rapid separations (<30 min).
Benefits and Practical Applications
Suppressed conductivity detection offers superior sensitivity, broader dynamic range, and resilience to complex matrices and pH extremes. It streamlines workflows via online eluent generation and self-regenerating suppressors. Nonsuppressed detection provides a simpler hardware configuration but at the cost of higher detection limits, limited calibration range, and susceptibility to baseline drift.
Future Trends and Opportunities
- Development of next-generation high-capacity columns (e.g., Dionex IonPac CS18) for enhanced resolution and throughput.
- Integration of gradient elution strategies with suppressed detection for complex sample matrices.
- Miniaturized IC platforms and coupling with mass spectrometry for trace-level speciation.
- Advanced suppressor technologies to further reduce maintenance and expand eluent compatibility.
- Application expansion to emerging pollutants, trace metals, and industrial process monitoring.
Conclusion
Suppressed conductivity detection on a high-capacity CS16 column significantly outperforms nonsuppressed detection in sensitivity, dynamic range, and robustness. For routine and trace inorganic cation analysis—particularly in challenging matrices or requiring broad calibration—suppressed IC is the preferred method. Nonsuppressed detection remains valuable for simpler workflows where lower sensitivity suffices.
Reference
- Small H.; Stevens T.S.; Bauman W.C. Anal. Chem. 1975, 47, 1801–1809.
- Pohl C.A.; Johnson E.L. J. Chromatogr. Sci. 1980, 18, 442–452.
- Weiss J. Handbook of Ion Chromatography; Dionex Corporation: Sunnyvale, CA, 1986.
- Harrison K.; Burge D. Pittsburgh Conference on Analytical Chemistry, 1979.
- Gjerde D.T.; Fritz J.S.; Schmuckler G. J. Chromatogr. 1979, 186, 509–519.
- Molnar I.; Knauer H.; Wilk D. J. Chromatogr. 1980, 201, 225–240.
- Rey M.A.; Pohl C.A. J. Chromatogr. A 1996, 739, 87–97.
- Rocklin R.D.; Rey M.A.; Stillian J.R.; Campbell D.L. J. Chromatogr. Sci. 1989, 27, 474–479.
- Kolla P.; Kohler J.; Schomburg G. Chromatographia 1987, 23, 465–471.
- Sarzanini C.; Mentasti E. J. Chromatogr. A 1997, 789, 301–321.
- Liu Y.; Avdalovic N.; Pohl C.; Matt R.; Dhillon H.; Kiser R. Am. Lab. 1998, November, 48C–54C.
- Dionex Corporation. Application Note 141; Sunnyvale, CA.
- ASTM D6919-03. Annual Book of ASTM Standards, 2003, Vol. 11.01.
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