Difference between revisions of "CHEM-5181"

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(Electric Field Driven Separations)
(LC, GC, and IC)
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===LC, GC, and IC===
 
===LC, GC, and IC===
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 +
*(GC, Suggested) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/data/articlestandard/lcgc/252004/99406/article.pdf More Speed, Better Precision, Higher Sensitivity: Why Buy a New Gas Chromatograph?], Engewald and Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 2004.
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*(GC, Suggested) [http://pubs3.acs.org/acs/journals/doilookup?in_doi=10.1021/ac060638e 2006 Analytical Chemistry Review on Gas Chromatography], Gary A. Eiceman, Jorge Gardea-Torresdey, Frank Dorman, Ed Overton, A. Bhushan, and H. P. Dharmasena, <i>Anal. Chem.</i>, 78(12) pp 3985 - 3996, 2006.
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*(GC, Reference) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=147842 Fifty Years of GC Instrumentation], L.S. Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 2005.
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*(GC, Suggested) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/data/articlestandard/lcgc/492001/3156/article.pdf Evolution of Capillary Columns for Gas Chromatography], L.S. Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 10(1), 2001.
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*(LC, Suggested) [http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/mams/MAMS/middleframe_files/teaching_files/ME330.884/2005/MS2005-Lecture-4-Chromatography.pdf Lecture on HPLC and CE from Prof. Bob Cotter]
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*(LC, Reference) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=159255 Csaba Horvath and the Development of the First Modern High Performance Liquid Chromatograph], L.S. Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 2005.
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*(LC, Reference) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/article/articleDetail.jsp?id=172945 Jim Waters: The Development of GPC and the First HPLC Instruments], L.S. Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 2005.
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*(IC, Reference) [http://pubs3.acs.org/acs/journals/doilookup?in_doi=10.1021/ac060098l 2006 Analytical Chemistry Review on Planar Chromatography], Joseph Sherma, <i>Anal. Chem.</i>, 78(12) pp 3841 - 3852, 2006.
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*(Detector, Reference) [http://www.lcgcmag.com/lcgc/data/articlestandard/lcgc/062002/9029/article.pdf The Invention, Development, and Triumph of the Flame Ionization Detector], L.S. Ettre, <i>LC-GC North America</i>, 30(1), 2002.
  
 
==Feedback from Previous Years==
 
==Feedback from Previous Years==

Revision as of 17:01, 16 December 2010

This is the new home for the CU-Boulder Graduate Course CHEM-5181: Mass Spectrometry and Chromatography

  • The old web page is located here, and I'll be gradually move things over to this Wiki page, which is much easier to update.

Course Information

  • This course WILL be offered in Fall 2011, and WILL NOT be offered in Fall 2012
  • Fall 2010 Syllabus
  • Registering for the course:
    • Every CU student attending the course needs to register, either as (a) for grade; (b) for pass/fail; or (c) for "Audit/No Credit".
    • For non-CU students, you can register for the course through the CU Continuing Education Program ("ACCESS"), again as either (a) for grade; (b) for pass/fail; or (c) for "Audit/No Credit".
  • Lectures: Tue & Thu 11:00-12:15, Ekeley W166
  • Labs: to be determined, based on the student and MS facility schedules (typically three Tue afternoons 1-3 pm)
  • Office hours: immediately after class on Tue & Thu
  • Textbooks:
    • de Hoffmann & Stroobant. Mass Spectrometry, Principles and Applications, 3rd. Ed. ISBN: 0471485667; Library: QD96.M3 H6413 2007
    • McLafferty & Turecek Interpretation of Mass Spectra, 4th Ed., ISBN: 0935702253; Library: QC454.M22 1993;

FAQs about CHEM-5181

  • Can I audit the class?
    • Answer: Yes, but you need to register for it as "Audit / No Credit", either as a regular CU student or through the ACCESS Program. Auditors typically attend lectures but do not do the labs, homeworks, or exams, unless they want to.
  • But I don't want to register at all. Can I still audit the class?
    • Answer: No.
  • I work in industry and use MS and chromatography in my work, can I take the class?
    • Answer: Yes, registering through the ACCESS Program. Some things to think about: (a) you need to have the relevant background or be willing to work to gain the background, especially if you want to take the class for credit. (b) This is a class for 1st year graduate students in Anaytical & Environmental Chemistry, and it takes quite a bit of work to take the class for credit. If you don't have much time for the class due to your work responsibilities, you should register as "Audit / No Credit".

Lectures

Introduction, Review, Igor

Mass Spectrometers

  • 3D Ion Traps
    • Required Reading: de Hoffmann and Stroobant 2007, Section 2.2

Ionization Sources

MS Detectors, Data Acquisition, Vacuum

  • Vacuum Technology
    • Props: turbo pump, diaphragm pump

MS Interpretation

  • Interpretation of Mass Spectra III (The Molecular Ion)
    • Required Reading: McLafferty and Turecek 1993, Chapters 3 and 5
  • Interpretation of Mass Spectra IV (Fragmentation Mechanisms)
    • Required Reading: McLafferty and Turecek 1993, Chapters 4, and skim 9

Chromatography and Chemical Separations

  • Gas Chromatography
    • Prop: GC column
  • LC and HPLC
  • Ion Chromatography & Thin Layer Chromatography
  • Chromatographic Detectors

Homeworks

Reference material for homeworks

HW on Intro and Review of Fundamentals

HW on TOFMS

HW on Resolution & Accuracy

HW on Quadrupoles

HW on Ion Optics

Labs

Lab 1: MALDI-TOFMS

Lab 2: Electrospray MS

Lab 3: GC-MS of mixtures

Reference Materials

Suggestions Encouraged. Please send links to jose.jimenez at colorado.edu (All .pdf's are password restricted)

Introduction to Mass Spectrometry

Ionization Methods

Mass Analyzers

MS Interpretation

Chromatography: General

Electric Field Driven Separations

LC, GC, and IC

Feedback from Previous Years

Award for the Best Performance in CHEM-5181

CU Mass Spec Facility Instruments

ThermoFinnigan LCQ Classic

MDS SCIEX/Applied Biosystems API Q-Star Pulsar

Hewlett Packard(Agilent) 5988A GC/MS

Hewlett-Packard 5989 Electrospray/MS

Applied Biosystems Voyager-DETM STR BiospectrometryTM Workstation - MALDI TOF-MS

VG Autospec M

MS & Chromatography Courses at other Universities

MS Links

Analytical Chemistry Journals

Mass Spectrometry Journals

Chromatography and Analytical Separations Journals

Mass Spectrometry Societies