Progress in all‐glass stream splitting systems in capillary gas chromatography. Part I: Application of a simple “glass‐cap‐cross” as effluent splitter for splitless and on‐column injection
- 1 July 1988
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of High Resolution Chromatography
- Vol. 11 (7) , 543-546
- https://doi.org/10.1002/jhrc.1240110713
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dramatic selectivity changes on carrier gas flow change in a series‐coupled GC capillary tandemJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1985
- Flexible capillary effluent splitter of the “all-glass” typeJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1984
- Construction of a polyimide effluent splitter for multiple detection in capillary gas chromatographyJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1983
- A simple method for connecting fused silica and glass capillariesJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1982
- Construction of an efficient fused silica capillary column effluent splitter for gas chromatographyJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1981
- Glass capillary T‐connections for high resolution GCJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1981
- All-glass system for preparative gas chromatography using capillary columnsJournal of Chemical Ecology, 1980
- All‐glass capillary T‐joints and manifoldsJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1980
- Practical aspects of Pt/Ir effluent splitters for multidetector GC and pneumatic solute switchingJournal of High Resolution Chromatography, 1978
- Gas chromatographic multidetector coupled to a glass capillary columnAnalytical Chemistry, 1976