This application is a 371 of PCT/IT2010/000030, filed Feb. 1, 2010, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention concerns a vaporisation injector suitable for operating in a gas chromatography instrument.
The injector is a device which allows the transfer of a sample, consisting of the substance to be analysed and a solvent, for example from a syringe to the gas chromatography column by means of a carrier gas. The injectors can be on-column injectors, when the sample is injected into the column in a liquid form and vaporises at the beginning of the column, or they can be vaporisation injectors, in which case the sample is heated and vaporised inside the injector.
The subject of the present invention is a vaporisation injector, generally consisting of a heated vaporisation chamber into which the sample is fed for example via the needle of a syringe which crosses an insulation septum.
From the vaporisation chamber, the vaporised sample is transferred to the column by the action of the carrier gas, said transfer being performed on the whole sample injected (splitless), or only on a fraction of the sample injected (split). In the latter case the main part of the sample is diverted and discharged together with a fraction of the carrier gas. Furthermore, a current of the carrier gas is diverted before it meets the sample, in order to purge the septum.
Therefore, a vaporisation injector with splitting of the sample must also have, in addition to the means for heating the vaporisation chamber, suitable pneumatic connections to subdivide the carrier between the inlet into the vaporisation chamber and a duct for purging of the septum, and to subdivide the flow of the carrier and the sample between the part sent to the column and the part which is diverted or splitted.
In the evolution of these injectors the three different lines described above are controlled by proportional valves, preferably acting on one single manifold, the septum is mounted so that it can be replaced and the inside surface of the vaporisation chamber is covered by a liner which can also be removed for cleaning or replacement.
Non-vaporisable parts of the sample and fragments of septum can accumulate in the injector in the long term, negatively affecting the subsequent analyses, also in the event of replacement of the liner and/or septum. Although the majority of the contaminants remain on the liner, part of them tend to accumulate on the bottom, inside the injector body. The splitting line is also subject to contamination by the sample which can even clog it, and for this reason a carbon filter is provided. Said filter, however, cannot treat the line between the injector and the filter, which thus becomes a trap for the heaviest compounds.
The injectors produced so far, with relative pneumatic system, are fixedly mounted on the body of the gas chromatograph and hence maintenance can be performed only at the level of the septum, the liner and the carbon filter which can be installed on the carrier, purging and/or splitting lines. Therefore, the contamination of the other parts of the injector, injector body and pneumatic system cannot be removed unless the injector is entirely replaced.
The object of the invention is to provide a vaporisation injector which can be easily and rapidly disassembled, like the liner, to allow cleaning, for example by sonication or other known processes, or replacement of parts.
A further object of the invention is to provide a pneumatic system which allows disassembly of the injector and furthermore permits the installation of filters in particularly convenient and accessible positions for maintenance or replacement, while maintaining total system efficiency.
In order to achieve these and other objects, the invention concerns a vaporisation injector having the characteristics and construction features as described in the claims.
A preferred embodiment of the invention will now be illustrated with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
The injector shown in
The block 10 comprises the control electronics 12, the control valves 13 of the pneumatic system; the filters 14 and a manifold 15 for distribution of the incoming carrier gas and the outgoing splitting and purge gases, in addition to the means 16 for controlled heating of the injector body, the structure of these components being essentially known in the field.
The body 10 furthermore defines a surface 17 designed to support the body 11 of the injector and having two threaded apertures 18 for housing screws 19 for fastening the injector body.
The injector body 11 consists of a cylindrical element 20 designed to be inserted in the heating element 16 and terminating at the top in a wider area 21 comprising a counter-surface resting on the surface 17 of the block, with apertures 22 for the screws 19, in addition to the gas distribution means which will be described below.
At the top, the injector body 11 has an upper closing nut 23 to permit access to the vaporisation chamber where a liner 24 can be housed and removed for replacement or cleaning. However, due to the possibility to remove the injector body, a liner is not strictly required. A further nut 23′ is also provided for removing the upper cover, containing the injection hole, in order to allow access to the support 41 of the septum so that it can be removed for cleaning or replacement.
Inside the injector body, passages are provided for the transit gases and O-rings for separation of the flows, as can be seen in
The carrier gas and sample flow which is not sent to the column (splitting flow) is conveyed back towards the head of the injector on the outside of the liner 24 and fed to a discharge channel 35 and to the apertures 31 and 28.
The separation between the carrier gas and the splitting gas is obtained by means of a first toroidal gasket (O-ring) 36. The gas coming from cleaning of the septum (purge flow) is sent to the apertures 30 and 29 through the channels indicated by 38 and said flow is separated from the carrier flow by means of a second toroidal gasket (O-ring) 39 in the injector head. Lastly, a third toroidal gasket 40 separates the purge gas from the external atmosphere.
The flows are controlled, according to known methods, by pressure sensors and proportional valves, installed on the block 10.
With reference to
In
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IT2010/000030 | 2/1/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/20/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/092724 | 8/4/2011 | WO | A |
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5827353 | O'Neil | Oct 1998 | A |
5944877 | O'Neil | Aug 1999 | A |
7273518 | Song et al. | Sep 2007 | B2 |
20060065122 | Song et al. | Mar 2006 | A1 |
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0 510 511 | Oct 1992 | EP |
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2003 344374 | Dec 2003 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120280061 A1 | Nov 2012 | US |