5 hardware/software faults in the instruments, Or simply the vagaries of the chemistry, General -42 – Metrohm 746 VA Trace Analyzer User Manual

Page 541: Oxygen in the analysis solution -42, Overcharging of the working electrode -43, Disturbances at the hmde through gas formation -45, Complex formation -46, Peak on highly curved baseline -47, Peak overlapping -47

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7 Safety, Errors, Troubleshooting, Diagnosis, GLP

746 VA Trace Analyzer / 747 VA Stand

7-42

7.5

Hardware/software faults in the instruments
or simply the vagaries of the chemistry

7.5.1

General

The hardware and software of the 746 and 747 VA instruments are constructed of

tested, reliable and checked components. While this does not exclude faults, it en-

sures they appear only rarely. What you should do in such cases is described in

sections 7.3 and 7.4.

Much more likely than genuine hardware/software faults however, are peculiarities

and vagaries of the chemistry which simulate instrument faults and thus give

grounds for inquiries. Such faults manifest themselves primarily in the fact that the

automatic peak evaluation no longer functions properly and results on the dialog

page ”RESULTS” (see section 5.5.2) are either missing completely or are marked

by appropriate comments as having errors or difficulties associated with the peak

evaluation.

In both cases, the first move is to check whether the faults are caused by undesired

chemical processes occurring at the electrode or in the analysis solution. Here,

such faults due to the chemistry can usually only be rectified in whole or at least in

part by chemical countermeasures (e.g. different supporting electrolyte concentra-

tion, different supporting electrolyte, different pH, longer enrichment time, modifica-

tion or change of the measurement technique). In what follows, such ”vagaries of

chemistry” are explained in more detail with the aid of a few interesting and oft-

occurring examples.

7.5.2

Oxygen in the analysis solution

Oxygen can be electrochemically reduced and produces two waves in the voltam-

mogram, one of which is characterized by the appearance of a pronounced maxi-

mum. The oxygen reduction can interfere for two reasons:

The signals of the analytes are masked by the oxygen waves.

This becomes noticeable primarily in trace analysis as the oxygen

is present in a relatively high concentration in solutions saturated

with air (ca. 8 mg/L at room temperature).

The hydrogen peroxide formed in the 1

st

step of the oxygen re-

duction can react further with certain substances.

For these reasons, oxygen must be removed from the analysis solution before the

polarographic analysis by saturation with inert gas (usually nitrogen). With the inert

gas flow rate of ca. 20 L/h set on the 747 VA Stand in the factory, a purging time of

3...5 min usually suffices.

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