Gas-solid chromatography uses a solid as the stationary phase, while gas-liquid chromatography uses an immobilized liquid as the stationary phase. Both techniques involve separating compounds via their interaction with the stationary phase as they travel through the column in a gas stream. Gas chromatography separates compounds based on how strongly they interact with the stationary phase.
Gas-solid chromatography uses a solid as the stationary phase, while gas-liquid chromatography uses an immobilized liquid as the stationary phase. Both techniques involve separating compounds via their interaction with the stationary phase as they travel through the column in a gas stream. Gas chromatography separates compounds based on how strongly they interact with the stationary phase.
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Gas-solid chromatography uses a solid as the stationary phase, while gas-liquid chromatography uses an immobilized liquid as the stationary phase. Both techniques involve separating compounds via their interaction with the stationary phase as they travel through the column in a gas stream. Gas chromatography separates compounds based on how strongly they interact with the stationary phase.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as TXT, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd