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How Dirty Are You? Part 4…Manual Syringe Rinsing…The Answer

10 Dec 2014

So how many times do you need to rinse a syringe?

Well, I can tell you the answer for the experiment we did. Let me first refresh your memory on specifically what we did.

Sequence of manual syringe rinsing:

  1. 20 µL draw of a 500 ppm hydrocarbon standard and expel it
  2. 20 µL draw of acetonitrile – eject into sample vial – test via GC-FID
  3. Repeat step 2 many times

Each “rinse” was tested via GC-FID.

How many 20 µL acetonitrile rinses were needed to show no signal (FID)?

The answer is 4.

I want to thank everyone that commented when I posed the question. Most people were right on track with about 4 rinses. It is also funny that people tended to do“extra”rinsing regardless of what they thought was required. I still do this with about 6 to 10 rinses depending on the situation.

I wanted to share some helpful hints from people who commented:

  • Use more than one rinse solvent especially in situations were analytes have a wide range of polarity
  • Use more than one rinse vial
  • Use the same solvent for rinsing as is used for the sample and standard solutions

Here is a chromatogram of a 50 ppm hydrocarbon standard followed by chromatograms of consecutive rinses. The 50 ppm chromatogram can be used as an intensity reference because the y-axis is the same for all chromatograms.

chromatogram of a 50 ppm hydrocarbon standard
chromatogram of a 50 ppm hydrocarbon standard - rinse 1
chromatogram of a 50 ppm hydrocarbon standard - rinse 2
chromatogram of a 50 ppm hydrocarbon standard - rinse 3
manual syringe rinses after 500 ppm hydrocarbon standard draw
GNBL4696