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. 2004 May 7;1035(2):195-202.
doi: 10.1016/j.chroma.2004.02.069.

Quantification from highly drifted and overlapped chromatographic peaks using second-order calibration methods

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Quantification from highly drifted and overlapped chromatographic peaks using second-order calibration methods

Enric Comas et al. J Chromatogr A. .

Abstract

For determining low levels of pesticides and phenolic compounds in river and wastewater samples by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), solid phase extraction (SPE) is commonly used before the chromatographic separation. This preconcentration step is not necessarily selective for the analytes of interest and it may retain other compounds of similar characteristics as well. In this case, we present, humic and fulvic acids caused a large baseline drift and overlapped the analytes to be quantified. The inaccurate determinations of the area of the peaks of these analytes made it difficult to quantify them with univariate calibration. Here we compare three second-order calibration algorithms (generalized rank annihilation method (GRAM), parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC) and multivariate curve resolution-alternating least squares (MCR-ALS)) which efficiently solve this problem. These methods use second-order data, i.e., a matrix of responses for each peak, which is easily obtained with a high performance liquid chromatography-diode array detector (HPLC-DAD). With these methods, the area does not need to be directly measured and predictions are more accurate. They also save time and resources because they can quantify analytes even if the peaks are not resolved. GRAM and PARAFAC require trilinear data. Biased and imprecise concentrations (relative standard deviation, %R.S.D. = 34) were obtained without correcting the time-shift. Hence, a time-shift correction algorithm to align the peaks was needed to obtain accurate predictions. MCR-ALS was the most robust to the time-shift. All three algorithms provided similar mean predictions, which were comparable to those obtained when sulfite was added to the samples. However, the predictions for the different replicates were more similar for the second-order algorithms (%R.S.D. = 3) than the ones obtained by univariate calibration after the sulfite addition (%R.S.D. = 13).

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