Chromatography detector

A chromatography detector is a device used in gas chromatography (GC) or liquid chromatography (LC) to visualize components of the mixture being eluted off the chromatography column. There are two general types of detectors: destructive and non-destructive. The destructive detectors perform continuous transformation of the column effluent (burning, evaporation or mixing with reagents) with subsequent measurement of some physical property of the resulting material (plasma, aerosol or reaction mixture). The non-destructive detectors are directly measuring some property of the column effluent (for example UV absorption) and thus affords for the further analyte recovery.

Destructive detectors:

Non-destructive detectors:

References

  1. ^ Kantor, E. A.; Vozhdaeva, M. Y.; Tsypysheva, L. G.; Kantor, L. I. Journal of Analytical Chemistry 62, 11, 1069-1074
  2. ^ http://www.cyberlipid.org/elsd/elsd0001.htm Evaporative light scattering detector
  3. ^ http://www.reachdevices.com/Commercial_UV_detectors.html UV detectors
  4. ^ http://www.chromatography-online.org/HPLC/Electrical-Conductivity/rs29.html Conductivity monitor