Dear Sue, although I did not understand fully what your problem exactly is I recommend the following solution: 1. Use standards for all desired compounds and analyse them by EA-IRMS 2. Do this again with one or two compounds which are not in your samples and which you use as internal standards 3. Adjust your GC-C-IRMS system to the isotope ratio of one of these internal standards measured by EA-IRMS 4. Measure standards with different amounts covering the whole amount range of your samples 4. Calculate offsets between measured EA-IRMS values and calculated GC-C-IRMS values via isotope mass balance calculation of desired fatty acids. Offsets might be a function of signal intensity 5. Measure your samples and standards. 6. Calculation of "real" isotopic composition of your samples should be made as follows: 6.1. Correct for reference gas drift during each run 6.2. Correct for amount dependence 6.3. Correct for derivatization C (H) 6.4. Correct for offset between EA-IRMS and GC-C-IRMS For more details look at the following papers: Glaser B. (2005) Potential and constraints of compound-specific stable isotope (d13C) analysis in environmental research. Journal of Plant Nutrition and Soil Science, 168, 633-648. Glaser B., Amelung W. (2002) Determination of 13C natural abundance of amino acid enantiomers in soil: methodological considerations and first results. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 16, 891-898. Gross S., Glaser B. (2004) Minimization of foreign carbon addition during derivatization of organic molecules for compound-specific d13C analysis of soil organic matter. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 18, 2753-2764. DOI: 10.1002/rcm.1684. Schmitt J., Glaser B., Zech W. (2003) Amount-dependent isotopic fractionation during compound-specific isotope analysis. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 17, 970-977. Meier-Augenstein W. (1997) The chromatographic side of isotope ratio mass spectrometry: Pitfalls and answers. LC GC International, 10, 17-25. Meier-Augenstein W., Watt P.W., Langhans C.D. (1996) Influence of gas chromatographic parameters on measurement of 13C/12C isotope ratios by gas-liquid chromatography-combustion isotope ratio mass spectrometry. Journal of Chromatography A, 752, 233-241. -----Original Message----- From: Stable Isotope Geochemistry [mailto:[log in to unmask]]On Behalf Of Susan Ziegler Sent: Freitag, 28. April 2006 18:29 To: [log in to unmask] Subject: [ISOGEOCHEM] GC-C-IRMS issues Hello All: I am seeking any possible hints to solve a problem that has developed in our GC-IRMS system. At the moment the suite of standards we run for d13C of FAMEs in order to check for consistency no longer exhibits a constant correction factor across all the compounds in each standard chromatogram which range from 14:0 through 23:0 in size. In fact we are seeing greater depletion in 13C for the longer (or later RT) FAMEs by as much as a few per mil relative to the first compounds (14:0). I have been trying to isolate the variables and this is what I've found so far: 1. Flow is constant throughout the entire GC run (2 mL/min). 2. CO2 injected throughout the run remains constant in it isotopic composition so does not exhibit the depletion see in compounds that must be combusted. 3. I figured it must be the combustion column so it has been replaced and we are again seeing the same problem. 4. Peak shape looks pretty good with widths remaining within 15-20s and fairly sharp ratio traces. The ratio traces do become a little broader with the last few more deplete compounds but not particularly worse than runs where we've gotten good consistent values. We are using an Agilent (HP) 6890 GC with a split/splitless injector in splitless mode. I have changed the septa (done frequently anyway), liner, and the gold seal and washer. The GC column is very new but also has been cut (`0.5m) to see if reactive sites may have been a problem. We are using the metal Valco cross piece and have been now for years without a problem, could this have developed active sites that may yield such symptoms? Thanks for any information anyone might have regarding this problem...I've been at this for some time now and am in danger of pulling out all my hair! Best regards, Sue