I am running an analysis that has six compounds that are evaluated for precision, linearity and drift. I have the unusual problem that drift for 5 of the compounds after analysis is ~ 20% higher, but drift for one compound, TOTM, is doubled, with a drift of 100% or more. I am using Acenaphthene-d10 as the internal standard, and response of this compound is really steady, but especially after samples are injected, the response of TOTM increases significantly. I've been working on this project for about a month, and if I look back at older data, the response of TOTM has been slowly increasing through each analysis, while the response of the internal standard has remained relatively constant. (TOTM initial response was ~ 100,000 - but now it is close to 2 million).
Some of our thoughts for the source of this problem are:
That there are active sites (or something) in the column that is causing TOTM to hang up- running the sample injections pushes that out so that more TOTM elutes in later injections.
That there is a matrix effect from the sample that increases the response from TOTM.
That the inlet is discriminating against TOTM, but then less later on? (I'm running the same method the whole time.)
Other typical players in GCMS methods are the source, the inlet, and the column, but it's still hard to see how any of those would lead to increased response from mostly just one compound.
Any thoughts? Thanks!