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  2. Solvent suppression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solvent_suppression

    The signal from the solvent can overwhelm that of the solute, and the NMR instrument may not collect any meaningful data. Solvent suppression techniques are particularly important in protein NMR where the solvent often includes H 2 O as well as D 2 O. [2]

  3. Cold trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_trap

    Some workers prefer the opposite arrangement, where vapors flow down the wall of the trap, and are sucked up the inner tube; this reduces blockage. [1] In vacuum applications, a cold trap is a device that condenses all vapors except the permanent gases (hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen) into a liquid or solid.

  4. Ion suppression in liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_suppression_in_liquid...

    Ion suppression in LC-MS and LC-MS/MS refers to reduced detector response, or signal:noise as a manifested effect of competition for ionisation efficiency in the ionisation source, between the analyte(s) of interest and other endogenous or exogenous (e.g. plasticisers extracted from plastic tubes, [1] mobile phase additives) species which have not been removed from the sample matrix during ...

  5. Schlenk line - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schlenk_line

    The inert-gas line is vented through an oil bubbler, while solvent vapors and gaseous reaction products are prevented from contaminating the vacuum pump by a liquid-nitrogen or dry-ice/acetone cold trap. Special stopcocks or Teflon taps allow vacuum or inert gas to be selected without the need for placing the sample on a separate line. [3]

  6. Flame arrester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flame_arrester

    A flame arrester during testing A flame arrester made for a 91 cm (36 inch) pipe weighing 10 tons. A flame arrester (also spelled arrestor), deflagration arrester, [1] or flame trap [2] is a device or form of construction that will allow free passage of a gas or gaseous mixture but will interrupt or prevent the passage of flame.

  7. Chemical trap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemical_trap

    In chemistry, a chemical trap is a chemical compound that is used to detect unstable compounds. [1] The method relies on efficiency of bimolecular reactions with reagents to produce a more easily characterize trapped product. In some cases, the trapping agent is used in large excess.

  8. Atmospheric-pressure chemical ionization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atmospheric-pressure...

    The evaporated mobile phase of LC acts as the ionization gas and reactant ions. If water is the only solvent in the evaporated mobile phase, the excited nitrogen molecular ions N 4 +* would react with H 2 O molecules to produce water cluster ions H + (H 2 O) n. [10] Then, analyte molecules M are protonated by the water cluster ions.

  9. Amine gas treating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amine_gas_treating

    Amine gas plant at a natural gas field. Amine gas treating, also known as amine scrubbing, gas sweetening and acid gas removal, refers to a group of processes that use aqueous solutions of various alkylamines (commonly referred to simply as amines) to remove hydrogen sulfide (H 2 S) and carbon dioxide (CO 2) from gases.