5 calibration and quantification, 1 general information – Metrohm IC Net 2.2 User Manual

Page 169

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7.5 Calibration and quantification

IC Net 2.2

161

7.5

Calibration and quantification

7.5.1 General

information

The aim of any chromatographic analysis is to answer the ques-
tion "What components are present in the sample and what are
their concentrations?". Two procedures are used to achieve this
goal: the first step is called calibration, the second step includes
quantification.

Calibration has two aims: to get retention characteristics for all
components of interest (these data are stored in the component
table) and to establish a relation between injected amounts and
corresponding instrumental responses for all components of in-
terest (stored in the concentration table). Calibration is performed
by running one or several chromatograms of samples with known
composition and known concentration of components (stan-
dards). For each calibrated component a calibration curve is
constructed as a result.

With «IC Net» three different procedures can be used for the con-
struction of the calibration curve. By far the most important
method for ion chromatography is the external standard cali-
bration
(absolute calibration) which is described in detail in this
section. The other methods of internal standard calibration
(relative calibration) and tabulated calibration (relative gradient
factor, a modified method for external standard calibration) are of
lesser importance and are not described in detail here (for details
please refer to on-line help).

Identification is a procedure that enables to decide what peaks
on the chromatogram correspond to what components. The iden-
tification is performed on the basis of the

Component table

created

for calibration.

Quantification is a calculation procedure that determines com-
ponents concentrations, on the basis of instrumental response
(peak height or area), using the calibration curves obtained earlier
for each component.

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