Agilent ALS Turret Manual PDF
Agilent ALS Turret Manual PDF
Agilent ALS Turret Manual PDF
Automatic Liquid
Sampler
Agilent Technologies
Notices
© Agilent Technologies, Inc. 2010 Safety Notices
No part of this manual may be reproduced in
any form or by any means (including elec-
tronic storage and retrieval or translation CAUTION
into a foreign language) without prior agree-
ment and written consent from Agilent A CAUTION notice denotes a haz-
Technologies, Inc. as governed by United
States and international copyright laws. ard. It calls attention to an operat-
ing procedure, practice, or the like
Manual Part Number that, if not correctly performed or
G4513-90010 adhered to, could result in damage
to the product or loss of important
Edition data. Do not proceed beyond a
Fifth edition, November 2010 CAUTION notice until the indicated
Fourth edition, June 2010 conditions are fully understood and
Third edition, July 2009
met.
Second edition, May 2009
First edition, February 2009
Printed in USA
Agilent Technologies, Inc. WA R N I N G
2850 Centerville Road
Wilmington, DE 19808-1610 USA A WARNING notice denotes a
hazard. It calls attention to an
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met.
Part 2: Installation
2 Compatibility
Hardware 22
Firmware 22
3 Installation
Preparing the GC 26
Preparing the GC Inlet Area 27
7890A GC and 7820 MSD 27
6890 Series GCs 29
Installing the G4514A Sample Tray 33
Install the mounting bracket 34
Prepare the sample tray 35
Install the sample tray 40
Connect the communication cable 42
Installing the G4513A Injector 43
Install the injector 43
Check your work 53
Choosing the Turret Type 54
Connecting the Cables 55
7890A GC 55
7820A GC 56
6890N or 6890 Plus GC 57
6890A GC 58
6850 Series GC 59
7820 MSD 60
4 Accessories
Installing the G4526A/G4517A ALS Controller (6890A GCs) 76
Controller site requirements 76
Verify the power configuration 80
Installing the G4526A/G4516A ALS Interface Controller (6890 Plus
GCs) 81
Installing the G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 85
Remove the sample tray from the GC 85
Install the G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 86
Installing the G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate 96
Tools needed 96
Remove the sample tray from the GC 96
Install the heating and cooling plate 97
Part 3: Operation
5 Introduction to Operation
About your 7693A Automatic Liquid Sampler 114
Components 114
Features 116
Capabilities 119
Fast Injection 120
Sample Carryover 122
Solvent wash 122
Sample wash 122
Sample pump 122
Number and type of washes 122
Methods and Sequences 125
The Sampler Cycle 126
6 ALS Configuration
Configuring the Injector 130
7890A GC, 7820A GC, and 7820 MSD 130
6890 Series GC 131
6850 Series GC 133
5975T LTM-GC/MSD 134
Configuring the Sample Tray 135
7890A GC and 7820 MSD 135
7 ALS Parameters
Setting the Injector Parameters 142
7890A GC, 7820A GC, and 7820 MSD 143
6890 Series GC 146
6850 Series GC 148
5975T LTM-GC/MSD 148
Setting the Sample Tray Parameters 149
7890A GC and 7820 MSD 149
6890 Series GC 150
10 Running Samples
Running a Sample 192
Injection volume 192
Using the ALS Controller 193
Interrupting a Run or Sequence 194
Sampler response to interruptions 194
Restarting an interrupted sequence 194
Running a Priority Sample 195
11 Maintenance
Periodic Maintenance 200
Tray Home and Park Positions 202
Installing a Syringe 203
Removing a Syringe 207
13 Troubleshooting
Symptom: Variability 244
Symptom: Contamination or Ghost Peaks 246
Symptom: Smaller or Larger Peaks Than Expected 247
Symptom: Sample Carryover 249
Symptom: No Signal/No Peaks 250
Correcting Syringe Problems 251
Correcting Sample Vial Delivery Problems 252
Part 1:
Safety and Regulatory Information
Important Safety Warnings 14
Safety and Regulatory Certifications 15
Cleaning 18
Recycling the Product 18
Agilent Technologies 11
12 Installation, Operation, and Maintenance
Agilent 7693A Automatic Liquid Sampler
Installation, Operation and Maintenance
1
Safety and Regulatory Information
Important Safety Warnings 14
Many internal parts of the instrument carry dangerous voltages 14
Electrostatic discharge is a threat to instrument electronics 14
Safety and Regulatory Certifications 15
Information 15
Symbols 16
Technical and environmental specifications 16
Electromagnetic compatibility 17
Sound Emission Certification for Federal Republic of Germany 17
Fuses and battery 18
Cleaning 18
Recycling the Product 18
Agilent Technologies 13
Safety and Regulatory Information
All these parts are shielded by covers. With the covers in place, it should be difficult
WA R N I N G
to accidentally make contact with dangerous voltages. Unless specifically
instructed to, never remove a cover.
If the power cord or wiring from the instrument to the gas chromatograph insulation
WA R N I N G
is frayed or worn, the cord must be replaced. Contact your Agilent service
representative.
This ISM device complies with Canadian ICES- 001. Cet appareil ISM est
conforme a la norme NMB—001 du Canada.
Information
The Agilent Technologies ALS meets the following IEC (International
Electrotechnical Commission) classifications: Safety Class I, Transient
Overvoltage Category II, Pollution Degree 2.
This unit has been designed and tested in accordance with recognized
safety standards and is designed for use indoors. If the instrument is used
in a manner not specified by the manufacturer, the protection provided by
the instrument may be impaired. Whenever the safety protection of the
Agilent ALS has been compromised, disconnect the unit from all power
sources and secure the unit against unintended operation.
Symbols
Warnings in the manual or on the instrument must be observed during all
phases of operation, service, and repair of this instrument. Failure to
comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design and the
intended use of the instrument. Agilent Technologies assumes no liability
for the customer’s failure to comply with these requirements.
Electromagnetic compatibility
This device complies with the requirements of CISPR 11 and IEC 61326- 1.
Operation is subject to the following two conditions:
1 This device may not cause harmful radio frequency interference.
2 This device must accept any radio frequency interference received,
including interference that may cause undesired operation.
If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television
reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on,
the user is encouraged to try one or more of the following measures:
1 Relocate the radio or antenna.
2 Move the device away from the radio or television.
3 Plug the device into a different electrical outlet, so that the device and
the radio or television are on separate electrical circuits.
4 Make sure that all peripheral devices are also certified.
5 Make sure that appropriate cables are used to connect the device to
peripheral equipment.
6 Consult your equipment dealer, Agilent Technologies, or an experienced
technician for assistance.
7 Changes or modifications not expressly approved by Agilent
Technologies could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment.
Sound pressure
Sound pressure Lp < 82 dB(A) according to DIN- EN 27779
(Type test).
Schalldruckpegel
Schalldruckpegel LP < 82 dB(A) nach DIN- EN 27779 (Typprufung).
Cleaning
To clean the external surfaces of the injector tower and sample tray,
disconnect the power and wipe down with a damp, lint- free cloth. Refer to
“Periodic Maintenance” on page 200 for more information.
Part 2:
Installation
Compatibility 21
Hardware 22
Firmware 22
The G4513A Injector 23
The G4514A Sample Tray 23
The G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 23
The G4520A Sample Tray with Installed Bar Code
Reader/Mixer/Heater 23
The G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate 23
The G4526A Upgrade Kit for 6890 Series GCs 24
Installation 25
Preparing the GC 26
Preparing the GC Inlet Area 27
Installing the G4514A Sample Tray 33
Installing the G4513A Injector 43
Choosing the Turret Type 54
Connecting the Cables 55
Parking the Sample Tray 62
Installing the Vial Racks 63
Updating the Firmware 68
Configuring the GC and Data System 70
Making a Trial Run 73
Accessories 75
Installing the G4526A/G4517A ALS Controller (6890A GCs) 76
Installing the G4526A/G4516A ALS Interface Controller (6890 Plus
GCs) 81
Installing the G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 85
Installing the G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate 96
Agilent Technologies 19
20 Installation, Operation, and Maintenance
Agilent 7693A Automatic Liquid Sampler
Installation, Operation and Maintenance
2
Compatibility
Hardware 22
Firmware 22
The G4513A Injector 23
The G4514A Sample Tray 23
The G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 23
The G4520A Sample Tray with Installed Bar Code
Reader/Mixer/Heater 23
The G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate 23
The G4526A Upgrade Kit for 6890 Series GCs 24
This chapter assists you in determining whether the 7693A ALS system is
suitable for your Agilent Gas Chromatograph (GC) and aids in identifying
existing equipment.
Agilent Technologies 21
2 Compatibility
Hardware
The 7693A ALS system is compatible with the following Agilent
instruments:
• 7890A GC
• 7820A GC
• 6890 Series GC
• 6850 Series GC
• 7820 MSD
• 5975T LTM- GC/MSD
Firmware
Agilent GCs require the minimum firmware revisions listed in Table 2.
To update the firmware, use either the provided Instrument Utility on the
GC and GC/MS Hardware User Information & Utilities DVD, or the Agilent
Lab Advisor software.
7890A GC A.01.10
7820A GC A.01.01
6890N GC N.06.07
If your 6890A or 6890 Plus GC does not have a LAN connection, the G2335A 6890 LAN kit is
NOTE also required.
3
Installation
Preparing the GC 26
Preparing the GC Inlet Area 27
Installing the G4514A Sample Tray 33
Installing the G4513A Injector 43
Choosing the Turret Type 54
Connecting the Cables 55
Parking the Sample Tray 62
Installing the Vial Racks 63
Updating the Firmware 68
Configuring the GC and Data System 70
Calibrating the ALS System 71
Making a Trial Run 73
The procedure for installing the 7693A ALS depends on the system
components purchased and the type of GC involved. In all cases, you must
remove any existing ALS system components before installation. Older GCs
will require firmware updates. Follow the steps in this chapter that are
relevant to your GC and ALS system setup.
Agilent Technologies 25
3 Installation
Preparing the GC
This procedure explains how to prepare an Agilent GC for the 7693A ALS
system.
The inlet may be hot enough to cause skin burns. Allow the inlet to cool to ambient
WA R N I N G
temperature before working near the inlet.
The inlet may be hot enough to cause skin burns. Allow the inlet to cool to ambient
WA R N I N G
temperature before working near the inlet.
Remove five of the seven screws securing the inlet cover to the GC. Do not
remove the two screws in the locations shown below.
1 Fully loosen the six Torx T- 20 screws on the top of the cover
(Figure 2).
Figure 2 Removing the injection port top cover and inlet fan cover (6890 Series GC)
4 Secure the replacement injection port top cover using two screws from
the original inlet cover in the hole locations (Figure 3).
Figure 3 Replacing the injection port top cover and inlet fan cover (6890 Series GC)
1390-1024
Screw M4
0515-0437
Screw M4
G4514-20529
Washer
Take care when holding the tray. Because the motors are heavy and located
WA R N I N G
off-center, an improper balance point can cause the tray to tip out of your grasp.
1 Set the tray on a secure, flat surface. Position the tray on its side so
the tray bracket faces up. Let the gantry slide all the way down.
Gripper jaw
Slide out
Gantry
Slide down
2 Slide the gripper jaw away from the tray base until the packing screw
is accessible.
3 Remove the packing screw using a Phillips screw driver and tweezers.
Packing screw
4
T-20
7
T-20
Figure 4 Hanging the tray bracket over the mounting bracket tabs.
3 Once attached, make sure that the sample tray is lying flat against the
mounting bracket. Each tab on the mounting bracket must be fully
latched to the tray bracket (Figure 5).
Parking post
positions
Shipping clamp
In the following steps, use a flat blade screwdriver that snugly fits the slot in the top of
CAUTION
the posts. An undersized blade can damage the post top and prevent the injector from
mounting properly.
Do not mount the G4513A Injector on a mounting post for any other injector; this can
CAUTION damage the injector. Remove the old post and replace it with the new one.
7 Install the injector mounting post (G4513- 20561, Figure 10) to the GC
inlet cover’s threaded connection. If the wrong post is used (for
example the 7683B ALS mounting post) the injector will not work. The
mounting post supplied in this kit only supports the G4513A Injector.
• 7890A GC, 7820A GC, and 7820 MSD. Install into the inlet cover in
the front or rear location, as desired. The post must be turned all the
way down (Figure 11).
Mounting posts
• 6890 Series GC. Install into the inlet cover in the front or rear
location, as desired. The post must be turned all the way down
(Figure 12).
Back
Front
6890
• 6850 Series GC. Install into the inlet mounting bracket. Loosen the
inlet screws, install the post and tighten the screws. The post must
be turned all the way down (Figure 13).
6850
• 5975T LTM- GC/MSD. Install into the inlet mounting bracket. The
post must be turned all the way down (Figure 14).
5975T LTM-GC/MSD
8 If a sample tray is installed, route the front injector cable through the
mounting bracket support structure. If installing a back injector, make
sure the cable is available.
Front injector cable Front injector cable routed Back injector cable
through mounting bracket support
10 Position the back injector on the mounting post and the back inlet
cover’s support foot.
Back injector
12 Position the front injector on the mounting post and the front inlet
cover’s support foot.
Front injector
7890A GC
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the injector and sample
tray to the 7890A GC.
7890A GC
Cables (G4514-60610)
Inj1 Inj2
Tray (Includes optional BCR)
Front Back
Injectors
7820A GC
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the injector to the 7820A
GC.
7820A GC
ALS Port
Front Back
Cables (G4514-60610)
Front Back
Injector Injector
Cables (G4514-60610)
Inj1 Inj2
Tray (Includes optional BCR)
Front Back
Injectors
6890A GC
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the 6890A GC to the
G4517A ALS Controller, and the controller to the injector(s) and sample
tray. See “Installing the G4526A/G4517A ALS Controller” for installation
instructions for the G4517A ALS Controller including the power supply
cord.
G4517A Controller
G1530-60930 6890 Remote
Front Back
RS-232 Injector Injector Tray
Cables (G4514-60610)
Remote
Inj1 Inj2
6890A GC Tray
Front Back
Sampler G1530-60600
Injectors (Includes optional BCR)
6850 Series GC
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the 6850 Series GC to the
to the injector.
G4513A Injector
6850 Series GC
Injector cable
(G4514-60610)
1 Connect the injector(s) to the controller with a G4514- 60610 cable. Use
the top injector connection on the back of the GC. See Figure 20.
2 Connect the GC power cord to the outlet.
7820 MSD
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the injector and sample
tray to the 7820 MSD.
7820 MSD
7820A GC
Sampler1 Tray
Cables (G4514-60610)
Inj1
Tray (Includes optional BCR)
Front
Injector
5975T LTM-GC/MSD
Follow the instructions below to properly wire the injector and sample
tray to the 5975T LTM- GC/MSD.
5975T LTM-GC/MSD
Sampler1
Cable (G4514-60610)
Inj1
Front
Injector
The gantry will move to the far- left position (away from the tray bracket),
and gripper jaw will move to the far- back position (away from the tray
front panel). This allows for clear access to the tray base.
To operate the sample tray, the gantry must be out of the Park position. Press [P] on the
NOTE tray front panel to move the gantry from the Park position to the Home position.
2 Align the tab found on the back side of the vial rack with the hole in
the tray’s back wall.
3 Lower the front of the vial rack so that it fits into place and rests flat
on the tray base. The LED light below each vial rack will light if the
vial rack is present. Be sure to install the vial racks so the vial rack
label numbers are in sequential order from right to left.
2 Using your free hand, pinch the two tabs towards each other until the
vial rack label snaps out of the vial rack.
All GCs Power cycle the instrument. When it reboots, it displays the
current firmware version.
7890A GC Press [Status] > [Clear], or press [Service Mode] > Diagnostics >
Instrument status to display the current GC firmware version. To view the
current ALS component firmware, press [Service Mode] > Diagnostics > ALS
Status. Scroll through the menu to view the ALS controller, Front/Back
Tower, Tray, and BCR firmware versions.
7820A GC, 7820 MSD Using the software keypad, press [Status] > [Clear], or
press [Service Mode] > Diagnostics > Instrument status to display the current GC
firmware version. To view the current ALS component firmware, press
[Service Mode] > Diagnostics > ALS Status. Scroll through the menu to view the
ALS controller, Front/Back Tower, Tray, and BCR firmware versions.
All 6890 GCs Press [Options], then select Diagnostics > Instrument Status.
Scroll down to view the GC and ALS component firmware versions. For
6890A GCs the G4517A ALS Interface Controller, Front/Back Tower,
Sample Tray, and BCR firmware versions are displayed. For 6890N GCs
the sample tray and BCR firmware versions are displayed.
Configure the GC
When hardware installation is complete, configure your GC for use with
the 7693A ALS system. See “ALS Configuration” for details. Be sure to
check:
• Injector usage
• Solvent bottle usage
• Solvent volume usage
Configuration
Agilent ChemStation, Agilent MSD ChemStation, and Agilent EZChrome
Elite data systems contain information about the sampling equipment in
use. This must be updated to remove the old information and replace it
with information about the new equipment that you have installed. See
your data system documentation for details.
Upgrading methods
Before using methods created for a previous sampler system, be sure to
edit them as needed to match the new hardware.
2 Remove any vials from transfer turret positions L1, L2, and L3 for all
installed injectors (Figure 24).
L1
L2
L3
4
Accessories
Installing the G4526A/G4517A ALS Controller (6890A GCs) 76
Installing the G4526A/G4516A ALS Interface Controller (6890 Plus
GCs) 81
Installing the G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater 85
Installing the G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate 96
The procedure for installing the 7693A ALS accessories depend on the
system components purchased and the type of GC involved. Follow the
steps in this chapter that are relevant to your GC and ALS system setup.
Agilent Technologies 75
4 Accessories
Temperature range 5 °C to 55 °C
Relative humidity range Maximum relative humidity of 80% for
temperatures up to 31 °C decreasing linearly to
50% relative humidity at 40 °C
Altitude range Up to 4300 m
Ventilation requirements
The controller is cooled by air flow which enters the front of the
instrument and exits through the rear. Do not4obstruct air flow in the
front or rear of the instrument.
15 cm minimum
G4517AA
31 cm Controller
Front
25 cm
Dimensions
25 cm (9.84 in) wide × 31 cm (12.2 in) deep × 11 cm (4.33 in) high × 5 kg
(11 lbs) weight
Orientation
The G4517A ALS Controller is designed to be installed in a horizontal
orientation as shown in Figure 26. If mounted in the vertical orientation,
the probability of tipping increases with the possibility of injury to
personnel.
ALS Controller
ALS Controller
ALS Controller
Electrical requirements
Line voltage The G4517A ALS Controller operates from one of the AC
voltage supplies listed in Table 4, depending on the standard voltage of
the country from which it was ordered. It is designed to work at a
specific voltage; make sure your instrument’s voltage option is
appropriated for your lab. The voltage requirement is printed near the
power cord attachment. See “Verify the power configuration” on page 80
for setting the proper voltage for this controller.
Failure to configure the correct voltage setting will blow the fuses.
CAUTION
Notch 110-120 V
220-240 V
DES FUSIBLES DE 250V
USE ONLY WITH 250V UNIQUEMENT AVEC
FUSES/EMPLOYER FUSES/EMPLOYER
UNIQUEMENT AVEC USE ONLY WITH 250V
DES FUSIBLES DE 250V
110-120 V 220-240 V
To change the power configuration, remove the fuse holder module using a
small, flat- bladed screwdriver in the notch at the top of the fuse holder.
Turn it over and reinstall. See Figure 27.
Before proceeding, turn off the main power switch and unplug the power cord.
WA R N I N G
Make sure you are properly grounded with an ESD strap before continuing.
CAUTION
Attempting to slide the entire board under the locking tab will damage the board’s
CAUTION
components.
Step 4.
Align tabs Step 5.
and cutouts Insert board
Step 6. to stops
Secure board
with screws Step 3.
Place board
in bracket
Step 7.
Connect
transformer
cable
Step 2.
Hold board
at an angle
8 If an MIO card (LAN card) is installed, loosen its two mounting screws
and slide the card out of the GC (Figure 30).
9 Connect the Controller PCB Cable, part no. G2612- 60510, to the main
board at J8 and to the ALS Interface board at P5. Route the cable
through the cutout in the main board (Figure 29 and Figure 31).
10 If an MIO card was removed from the GC, re- install it.
11 Using a nut driver, remove the cover plate over the three holes labeled
Injector 1 (default front), Injector 2 (default back), and Tray from the
rear panel. Save the plate and nuts so you can reinstall them to prevent
access to the high voltage area of the GC if you ever remove the ALS
interface board in the future.
12 Re- install the GC covers.
T-20 screws
2 Slide the gantry towards the tray bracket as far as it will go.
T-20 screw
4 Set the tray cover on a flat surface and remove the T- 10 Torx screw
that fastens the blanking plate to the tray cover. The blanking plate will
fall to the surface below the tray cover when the screw is completely
removed.
T-10 screw
G4514-60601 cable
6 Place the Bar Code Reader in the tray and secure with three screws.
3 screws
From tray
to BCR
From BCR
to tray
8 Reinstall the tray cover. Make sure the tray cover edge does not pass
the outer housing edge. Push the tray cover towards the front of the
tray as far as possible before installing screws.
T-20 screw
10 Install the self- tapping screw (0624- 0681) supplied with the BCR
accessory kit using a T- 10 Torx driver.
T-10 screw
11 Slide the gantry to the opposite end of the tray, and replace the
unknown vial station cover.
T-20 screws
Unknown vial
station cover
12 Tighten the two T- 20 Torx screws to secure the unknown vial station
cover to the sample tray.
13 If you wish to install an optional 1/8- in ID heater vent line, remove the
bottom access panel on the underside of the sample tray using a T- 20
Torx driver. Otherwise, skip to the next section.
14 Remove the Heater Vent Base (G4515- 20532) using a straight blade
screwdriver.
15 Attach the 1/8- in ID vent line to the BCR, and route the vent tubing
out through the bottom access panel. Three wire saddles (1400- 3408)
and three M3 x 4 screws (0515- 0663) are provided to help route the
vent tubing.
Ensure that the drainage tube is attached to the base of the sample tray. If possible,
CAUTION
remove any equipment from underneath the tray or take steps to protect any
equipment underneath the tray from potential leaks. When controlling for low sample
temperature with high ambient temperature or high humidity, water condensation from
the heating and cooling plate and sample tray could damage equipment under the
sample tray.
Tools needed
• Diagonal cutters
• T- 10 Torx driver
• T- 20 Torx driver
• T- 30 Torx driver
T-20 screws
Calibration post
6 Slide the gantry towards the home position (far- right, towards the tray
bracket).
T-20 screw
Tray cover
10 Loosen and remove the four screws securing the vial rack support
plate.
T-20 screws
11 Remove the support plate by lifting the front of the plate and pulling
outward towards the front of the sample tray. The support plate will
slide out.
12 Place the sample tray on its back and remove the bottom access panel
using a T- 20 Torx driver.
T-20 screw
13 Using a diagonal cutter, clip the metal tabs and remove the accessory
plate from the underside of the tray chassis.
14 Place the sample tray on its base and position the heating and cooling
plate partially in place, leaving room to run the heating and cooling
plate cable out of the tray chassis through the bottom access opening.
15 Once the cable is accessible through the bottom access opening, fit the
heating and cooling plate in place so the top is level with the tray
chassis.
16 Secure the heating and cooling plate to the tray chassis using four
screws (two in front, two in back).
T-20 screws
Back of tray
T-20 screws
17 Place the sample tray on its back and connect the heating and cooling
plate cable to the tray logic board (accessible through the bottom access
opening).
Connect cable
to tray board
6 Install the heating and cooling plate vial racks. See “Installing the Vial
Racks” for details.
7 Install the sample tray on the GC. See “Installing the Sample Tray” for
details.
Figure 32 Drainage tube correctly hung (left) and incorrectly submersed (right)
2 Secure the tubing to the back of the heating and cooling plate using a
1/4- in Swagelok connection.
3 Check for any leaks before powering on the GC.
Coolant
Use only distilled water, ethylene glycol, or propylene glycol as coolant.
To limit burn hazards, the heating liquids should not exceed 60 ºC.
CAUTION
The water bath and pump system used to control the sample vial
temperatures must meet the following specifications:
• The components must meet national standards for safety requirements,
be suitable for unattended operation, be suitable for continuous
operation, and be controllable for high- temperature protection.
• The recommended coolant temperature range is 5 to 60 ºC
• If you use a built- in pump, it must be suitable for external circulation
of liquid and for connection of 1/4- in od (6.35 mm) tubing or larger.
• If you use a pressure pump, it must maintain a pressure from 1.5 to 2.5
psi.
• If you use a suction pump, the pump vacuum cannot exceed –4 psi.
• Typical recirculator cooling power capacity varies from 1000 to 2000
watts.
The temperature sensor detects the average coolant temperature in the heating and
NOTE cooling plate.
Part 3:
Operation
5
Introduction to Operation
About your 7693A Automatic Liquid Sampler 114
Components 114
Features 116
Capabilities 119
Fast Injection 120
Sample Carryover 122
Solvent wash 122
Sample wash 122
Sample pump 122
Number and type of washes 122
Methods and Sequences 125
The Sampler Cycle 126
This chapter describes the components that make up the Agilent 7693A
ALS, some of the important features of the system, and the sampler
capabilities.
Components
The 7693A ALS system (Figure 34) can include:
• G4513A Injector module (one or two)
• G4514A Sample Tray (7890A GC, 6890 Series GC, 7820 MSD)
• G4515A Bar Code Reader/Mixer/Heater (BCR)
• G4517A ALS Controller (6890A GC)
• G4516A ALS Interface Board (6890 Plus GC)
• G4520A Sample Tray with pre- installed BCR/Mixer/Heater
• G4521A Enhanced Sample Handling Syringe Carriage
• G4522A Heating and Cooling Plate
• G4525A Set of 3 colored vial rack labels
• G4526A 7693A Upgrade Kit for 6890 Series GCs
Features
The key features of the ALS system include:
• Two interchangeable sample turrets provided with the injector:
• The standalone turret allows you to analyze up to 16 samples. It
holds two solvent positions and one waste bottle position. Two
sample positions can be alternately configured for sample
preparation. This turret is not compatible with the sample tray.
• The transfer turret is designed to work with the sample tray to
analyze up to 150 samples. The transfer turret has three sample vial
transfer locations; two of which are configurable for use in sample
preparation. There are six solvent A positions, four solvent B
positions, and five waste positions. This turret can be used with or
without the sample tray.
• Accessible solvent and waste vial capacity of 20 mL
• Ability to run sandwich injections with up to three sample layers
separated with air gaps
• A standard syringe carriage for syringes up to 100 µL
• An optional enhanced sample handling syringe carriage with a slow,
high- powered motor for syringes over 100 µL
• Cool on- column injections into 250- µm, 320- µm, and 530- µm columns
• An optional BCR/Mixer/Heater module
• An optional heating and cooling plate for the sample tray
• The ability to inject different sample amounts from different sample
vials
• The ability to interrupt a sequence to run priority samples, then resume
the sequence
• Fast, slow, and variable plunger speeds under Agilent data system
control (Table 5 and Table 6)
The default values for variable plunger speeds are based on a 10 µL
syringe. You should reduce the injection speed to accommodate larger
syringe volumes. If you are performing a large volume injection and see a
plunger error, try slowing the inject rate.
Draw (µL/min)
Dispense (µL/min)
Fast 300 600 1200 3000 6000 15000 30000 60000 1500 3000
Slow 300 600 1200 3000 6000 15000 30000 60000 1500 3000
Inject (µL/min)
Capabilities
Table 7 summarizes the capabilities of the 7693A ALS.
Parameter Range
Wash mode A, B
A - A2, B - B2
A - A6, B - B4
Solvent saving 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 80% of syringe size (µL)
Sample pumps 0 - 15
Fast Injection
This is a method of introducing a sample to a heated inlet without the
negative effect of needle fractionation.
If you are using the ALS for the first time, you may see some changes in
the resulting chromatograms. Most of the changes are due to reducing the
amount of vaporization from the needle during injection.
• The peak areas of your chromatograms may be smaller. Automatic fast
injection delivers the desired setpoint volume of sample. Without fast
injection, residual amounts of sample boil out of the needle and enter
the inlet. This extra amount could measure up to 1 µL.
• The peak areas of your chromatograms may show less differentiation
between the low boiling and high boiling components.
Without fast injection, the sample introduced is richer in low boiling
component than in high boiling components because of fractional
distillation in the needle. Not only does residual sample in the needle
enter the inlet, but the low boiling components boil off first. This is needle
fractionation or discrimination.
Automated injection
Manual injection
For more information on the performance of the ALS, order the following
technical papers from your Agilent representative:
Publication No. 43- 5953- 1843:Snyder, W.Dale. Fast Injection with the
7673A Automatic Injector: Chemical Performance, Technical Paper 108,
June 1985.
Publication No. 43- 5953- 1878:Snyder, W.Dale. Performance Advantage of
the 7673A Automatic Injector Over Manual Injection, Technical Paper
109, August 1985.
Publication No. 43- 5953- 1879:Kolloff, R.H.C.Toney, and J.Butler.
Automated On- Column Injection with Agilent 7673A Automatic Injector
and 19245A On- Column Capillary Inlet: Accuracy and Precision,
Technical Paper 110, August 1985.
Sample Carryover
Carryover is the presence of peaks from an earlier injection in the present
analysis.
The injector uses solvent washes, sample washes, and sample pumps to
control carryover. Each of these actions reduces the amount of sample left
in the syringe. The effectiveness of each depends on your application.
Solvent wash
The injector draws solvent into the syringe from either the solvent A
positions or solvent B positions, then discards the syringe contents into
one or more waste bottles. Solvent washes can occur before taking a
sample (pre- injection solvent wash) or immediately after the injection
(post- injection solvent wash). The volume of the wash can be adjusted.
Sample wash
During a sample wash, the injector draws the next sample into the syringe
and discards the contents into one or more waste bottles. Sample washes
occur before the injection. When sample is limited, you can use a solvent
prewash to wet the syringe before drawing sample. The volume of the
wash can be adjusted.
Sample pump
During a sample pump, the injector draws sample into the syringe and
returns it to the sample vial. Pumps occur after sample washes and
immediately before the injection. Pumps serve to eliminate bubbles. If the
needle contains solvent from a previous wash, the pump may add a small
amount of solvent that mixes with the sample and can dilute a small
volume.
Chromatogram C shows the result of washing the syringe with four 80%
syringe volume solvent washes. The carryover peaks disappear.
Chromatogram A:
20 mg/mL of solute
in methanol
Chromatogram B:
Methanol blank
without washes
Chromatogram C:
Methanol blank
after four washes
2 Wash the syringe with solvent. a Rotate a solvent bottle under the • The syringe can be washed several
syringe. times and with more than one
b Lower the syringe needle into the solvent. This is controlled by the
solvent. solvent pre-wash parameters.
c Draw in solvent.
d Raise the syringe needle out of the
solvent bottle.
e Rotate a waste bottle under the
syringe.
f Lower the syringe. Depress the
plunger to discard solvent.
g Raise the syringe needle out of the
waste vial.
3 Wash the syringe with sample. a Rotate the sample vial under the • The syringe can be rinsed with
syringe. sample several times.
b Lower the syringe needle so that the
needle pierces the vial septum and
enters the sample.
c Draw in sample.
d Raise the syringe and needle out of
the solvent bottle.
e Rotate a waste bottle under the
syringe.
f Lower the syringe needle. Depress
the plunger to discard sample.
g Raise the syringe needle out of the
waste vial.
4 Load the syringe with sample. a Rotate the sample vial under the • Actions c and d can be repeated
syringe. several times. The purpose is to
b Lower the syringe needle so that it expel air bubbles from the syringe.
pierces the vial septum.
c Draw in sample.
d With the needle still in the sample,
depress the syringe plunger quickly.
e After the final pump, draw in
sample.
f Raise the syringe needle out of the
sample vial.
5 Inject the sample. a Rotate the turret to expose the GC • Start signals are sent to the GC and
inlet. the data processor at the moment of
b Lower the syringe needle so that it injection.
pierces the inlet septum.
c Depress the syringe plunger to make
the injection.
d Raise the syringe needle out of the
GC inlet.
6 Wash the syringe with solvent. • Same as step 2, but according to the
post-injection parameters.
7 Transport the sample vial. • Return the sample vial to its initial
turret or tray location.
6
ALS Configuration
Configuring the Injector 130
7890A GC, 7820A GC, and 7820 MSD 130
6890 Series GC 131
6850 Series GC 133
5975T LTM-GC/MSD 134
Configuring the Sample Tray 135
7890A GC and 7820 MSD 135
6890 Series GC 137
Wash Mode Bottles— This is only displayed when the injector has a
transfer turret installed. On a 7890A GC the turret solvent bottle positions
are selected using the [Mode/Type] key:
6-A and 4-B Washes—Uses all 6 solvent A bottles if injector uses
solvent A washes. Uses all 4 solvent B bottles if injector uses solvent B
washes. The injector alternates between all bottles.
2-A and 2-B Washes—Uses solvent bottles A and A2 if injector uses
solvent A washes and solvent bottles B and B2 if injector uses solvent
B washes. The injector alternates between all bottles.
1-A and 1-B Washes—Uses solvent bottle A if injector uses solvent A
washes and solvent bottle B if injector uses solvent B washes.
The injector always uses both WA waste bottles if a solvent A wash is
used and both WB waste bottles if a solvent B wash is used.
Syringe size— Enter a syringe size between 0.5 and 500 µL.
The GC assumes the syringe volume represents full plunger stroke. If the maximum volume
NOTE marked on the syringe barrel is halfway up the barrel, you will need to enter double that
volume (the label in this case is half of the full plunger stroke).
6890 Series GC
Press [Config] [Front Injector] or [Config] [Back Injector] to display the
parameters.
Scroll to the desired parameter detailed below.
CONFIG F INJECTOR
Inject mode Normal
Wash mode A, B
Solvent saving Off
For a 6890A or 6890 Plus GC, the wash mode is controlled by scrolling
through the options using the [On] key, or entering a value of:
• 1 for using solvent bottle A if injector uses solvent A washes and
solvent bottle B if injector uses solvent B washes.
• 2 for using solvent bottles A and A2 if injector uses solvent A washes
and solvent bottles B and B2 if injector uses solvent B washes. The
injector alternates between all bottles.
• 3 for using all solvent A bottles if injector uses solvent A washes and
all solvent B bottles if injector uses solvent B washes. The injector
alternates between all bottles.
The injector always uses both WA waste bottles if a solvent A wash is
used and both WB waste bottles if a solvent B wash is used.
Solvent Saving—Use this option to vary the syringe wash amount from
about 10% to 80% of syringe volume. This setting reduces the amount of
solvent and sample consumed during each injection cycle. See "Sample
Carryover" on page 122 for more information.
On a 6890N, the wash amount is selected using the [Mode/Type] key. This
brings up a selection of actual wash volumes based on the volume of the
syringe used. Select Off to disable solvent saving option.
For a 6890A or 6890 Plus, these settings are controlled by scrolling
through the options using the [On] key, or entering a setpoint value of:
• 0 to disable the solvent saving feature resulting in a wash volume equal
to 80% of syringe volume.
• 1 for 10% of syringe volume wash
• 2 for 20% of syringe volume wash
• 3 for 30% of syringe volume wash
• 4 for 40% of syringe volume wash
Syringe size—Enter a syringe size between 0.5 and 500 µL.
The GC assumes the syringe volume represents full plunger stroke. If the maximum volume
NOTE marked on the syringe barrel is halfway up the barrel, you will need to enter double that
volume (the label in this case is half of the full plunger stroke).
Injector Light—Control the LED light (On, Off) inside the injection
tower.
6850 Series GC
Use your Agilent data system to configure the injector for use.
Inject mode—Select the injection mode.
Normal-Injects a single sample (including large volume injections with
only one septum puncture).
Sample + L2-Injects a mixture of two samples separated by an air
gap.
Sample + L2 + L3-Injects a mixture of three samples separated by
air gaps.
Large Volume-Performs large volume injections using multiple septum
punctures (multiple injections per run).
Wash mode— This is only displayed when the injector has a transfer turret
installed.
Wash using A, B—Uses solvent bottle A if injector uses solvent A
washes and solvent bottle B if injector uses solvent B washes.
Use A-A2, B-B2—Uses solvent bottles A and A2 if injector uses solvent
A washes and solvent bottles B and B2 if injector uses solvent B
washes. The injector alternates between both bottles.
Use All A, B—Uses all 6 solvent A bottles if injector uses solvent A
washes. Uses all 4 solvent B bottles if injector uses solvent B washes.
The injector alternates between all bottles.
Solvent Saving—Use this option to vary the syringe wash amount from
about 10% to 80% of syringe volume. This setting reduces the amount of
solvent and sample consumed during each injection cycle. See "Sample
Carryover" on page 122 for more information.
Syringe size—Enter a syringe size between 1 and 500 µL.
The GC assumes the syringe volume represents full plunger stroke. If the maximum volume
NOTE marked on the syringe barrel is halfway up the barrel, you will need to enter double that
volume (the label in this case is half of the full plunger stroke).
Injector Light—Control the LED light (On, Off) inside the injection
tower.
5975T LTM-GC/MSD
Configure the injector using your Agilent data system. Refer to your data
system help for details.
Enable Matrix 2 of 5
Enable Standard 2 of 5
Enable Interleaved 2 of 5
Enable UPC-A
Enable EAN/JAN 13
Enable EAN/JAN 8
Enable UPC-E
6890 Series GC
The sample tray delivers sample vials to the front and rear injectors
according to the defined sequence parameters. There are a separate set of
sequence parameters for each injector. The sample tray delivers vials to
the front injector before the rear injector. Stored sequences and bar code
configurations can be used to tell the sample tray where to deliver and
retrieve sample vials.
Press [Config] [Sample Tray] to access the sample tray, Bar Code Reader, and
heating and cooling plate setpoints.
To edit the sample tray BCR symbology mode, press [Config] [Sample Tray] >
BCR mode > [Mode/Status].
Standard 2 of 5
Matrix 2 of 5
Interleaved 2 of 5
UPC-A
UPC-E
EAN/JAN 8
EAN/JAN 13
7
ALS Parameters
Setting the Injector Parameters 142
7890A GC, 7820A GC, and 7820 MSD 143
6890 Series GC 146
6850 Series GC 148
5975T LTM-GC/MSD 148
Setting the Sample Tray Parameters 149
7890A GC and 7820 MSD 149
6890 Series GC 150
This chapter describes how to set the automatic liquid sampler parameters
using different controlling devices.
The descriptions in this chapter refer to the features available with the GC
firmware and does not necessarily describe the capabilities available with
Agilent data systems. Refer to Agilent data system online help.
FRONT INJECTOR
Injection volume 1.00
Viscosity delay 0
Inject Dispense Speed 6000
Solvent Draw Speed—If using a variable plunger speed, the speed of the
syringe plunger during solvent injection.
Solvent Dispense Speed—If using a variable plunger speed, the speed
of the solvent injection.
Pre dwell time—How long, in minutes, the needle remains in the inlet
before the injection.
Post dwell—How long, in minutes, the needle remains in the inlet after
the injection.
Sample offset—Enables variable sampling depth.
Injection mode—The type of injection mode.
Injection Reps—If Injection mode is LVI with multiple reps, the amount
of repetitions.
Injection Delay—If Injection mode is LVI with multiple reps, the length
of delay between repetitions.
L2 volume—If Injection mode is a 2- layer or 3- layer Sandwich Injection,
the amount of sample used in layer 2.
L2 Airgap volume—If Injection mode is a 2- layer or 3- layer Sandwich
Injection, the amount of air used between sample layer 1 and sample layer
2.
L3 volume—If Injection mode is a 3- layer Sandwich Injection, the amount
of sample used in layer 3.
L3 Airgap volume—If Injection mode is a 3- layer Sandwich Injection, the
amount of air used between sample layer 2 and sample layer 3.
Tower LED—Control the LED light inside the injection tower.
6890 Series GC
Press [Front Injector] or [Back Injector].
Scroll to the desired setpoint detailed below.
Enter a setpoint value, use the [Mode/Type] key, or turn the setpoint on or
off.
FRONT INJECTOR
Injection vol 1.00
#Sample pumps 6
Air gap 0.20
Viscosity delay 0
#Sample washes 0
#Solv A washes 0
#Solv B washes 0
Plunger speed FAST
Pre dwell time 0.00
Post dwell 0.00
Samp offset Off
#Solv A pre wash 0
#Solv B pre wash 0
Post dwell—How long, in minutes, the needle remains in the inlet after
the injection.
Samp offset—Enables variable sampling depth. Off disables the setpoint.
#Solvent A prewash—How many times the syringe is rinsed with solvent
before loading the syringe.
#Solvent B prewash—How many times the syringe is rinsed with solvent
before loading the syringe.
6850 Series GC
Set all parameters from your Agilent data system. Refer to your data
system help for details.
5975T LTM-GC/MSD
Set all parameters from your Agilent data system. Refer to your data
system help for details.
SAMPLE TRAY
Enable barcode Off
Enable vial heater Off
Enable mixer On
Mixing cycles 4
Mixing cycle time 1
Mixing speed 4000
6890 Series GC
The sample tray delivers sample vials to the front and rear injectors
according to the defined sequence parameters. There are a separate set of
sequence parameters for each injector. The sample tray delivers vials to
the front injector before the rear injector. Stored sequences and bar code
configurations can be used to tell the sample tray where to deliver and
retrieve sample vials.
Press [Sample Tray].
Scroll to the desired setpoint detailed below.
Enter a setpoint value, use the [Mode/Type] key, or turn the setpoint on or
off.
SAMPLE TRAY
Enable tray On
Enable barcode On
Enable Tray—Turn On for a tray sequence, Off for sample bottles in the
injector turret.
Tray temp—Available if the heating and cooling plate is installed. Displays
the actual tray temperature.
8
Syringes and Needles
Selecting a Syringe 154
Inspecting a Syringe 157
Installing a Syringe 158
Removing a Syringe 162
Replacing a Syringe Needle 163
The injector uses syringes as the sample- handling device. This chapter
describes their properties and uses.
Selecting a Syringe
1 Select the syringe type based on the inlet you are using and the volume
of sample you want to inject.
Failure to use an on-column syringe when injecting into an on-column inlet could
CAUTION
damage the injector, syringe and column.
Use syringe needles with a conical tip. Do not use sharp- tipped needles.
They tear the inlet septum and cause leaks. Also, a sharp- tipped needle
tends to wipe off on the septum as it exits resulting in a large solvent tail
on the chromatogram (Figure 37 and Figure 38).
Needle tips
Tapered needle
Inspecting a Syringe
Before installing a syringe:
1 Roll the syringe on the edge of a clean flat surface. If the tip of the
needle moves in a circle, straighten the shaft by bending it slightly near
where it connects to the syringe barrel and check it again (Figure 39).
2 Check for a rough needle. The needle surface may have closely spaced
concentric ridges that act like a miniature file and abrade pieces of the
septum into the inlet or vial. The ridges are easy to see under 10X
magnification.
If there are ridges, polish the needle by pulling it through a folded
piece of fine emery paper between your finger and thumb until the
ridges are gone. Be careful not to modify the tip of the syringe.
3 Check for a sticky plunger. Slide the plunger of the syringe up and
down a few times. It should move smoothly without sticking or binding.
If it is sticky, remove the plunger and clean it with solvent.
Installing a Syringe
To install a syringe (Figure 40):
Plunger carrier
Slide
Plunger screw
Needle
Needle support foot
7 Align the syringe flange with the flange guide and press the syringe
into place, keeping the needle end in the guide hole of the needle
support foot. Make sure that the flat edge of the syringe flange faces
out (Figure 41).
Failure to correctly install the syringe flange into the flange guide will result in damage to
NOTE the syringe plunger.
Flange
Flange guide
12 Verify that the needle is inside the guide hole of the needle support
foot. The needle should be straight and pass freely through the needle
guide hole.
If the needle is bent or is outside the guide hole, remove the syringe
and reinstall. See Figure 42 for a properly installed syringe.
14 Do the following only if the injector tower was removed from the
mounting post during installation:
a If necessary, plug in the injector cable.
b Install the injector on the mounting post. See “Installing the G4513A
Injector" on page 43 for details.
c If you have a sample tray, calibrate the ALS system. See “Calibrating
the ALS System" on page 229 for details.
Removing a Syringe
To remove a syringe:
1 Unplug the injector cable, and if desired, mount the injector on a
parking post.
2 Open the injector door.
3 Slide the syringe carriage to the top position.
4 Completely loosen the plunger thumb screw until it reaches the stop,
and lift the plunger carrier off of the syringe plunger.
5 Open the syringe latch by swinging it in a counterclockwise direction.
Be careful not to bend the syringe needle. Only pull the syringe out of the carriage until
CAUTION
clear. The needle bends easily when still seated in the needle support guide.
6 Carefully pull the top of the syringe out of the flange guide, then lift
the needle out of the needle support foot.
To install a syringe, see “Installing a Syringe" on page 203 for details.
Plunger
Barrel
PTFE disk
Stop
Spring
Cap
9
Vials and Bottles
Preparing a Sample Vial 166
Select a sample vial 166
Select a vial septa 167
Fill a sample vial 169
Label a sample vial 168
Cap a sample vial 170
Preparing Solvent and Waste Bottles 172
Select the bottles 172
Fill the solvent bottles 173
Prepare the waste bottles 173
Placing Vials and Bottles in the Turret 174
With a sample tray 175
Without a sample tray 176
Using Two Injectors (7890A and 6890 Series GCs Only) 177
With a sample tray 177
Without a sample tray 177
How Many Sample Vials Can I Run? 178
Sandwich Injections 184
Example 2-layer sandwich injection 186
Example 3-layer sandwich injection 188
This chapter describes sample vials, solvent bottles, and waste bottles,
including how to place them in the tray or turret. It also discusses how to
estimate the maximum number of samples that can be run before solvent
bottles must be refilled or waste bottles must be emptied.
CD
6.25 ± 0.25
3.7 minimum
8.2±± 0.2
8.2 0.2
33.5 ± 1.5
Vial plus cap 32 ± 0.5
height 25 minimum
body height
11.7 ± 0.2
BD
Overlap Text
mismatch
1.0 3.6 minimum Bar code
maximum Text
26.6 maximum
Label skew
12.56
All dimensions are Maximum width
in millimeters measured at overlap
Correct sample vial dimensions are critical for proper gripper operation. Vials and labels
CAUTION
that do not meet these specifications may cause sampler errors. Service calls and
repairs found to be due to vials and microvials that do not meet these specifications
are not covered under warranty or the service contract.
Do not inject air into the vials to prevent this vacuum. This often damages the cap seal
CAUTION
and may damage syringe needles.
1 mL 50 µL
If using a sample vial with a screw cap top, be sure to completely tighten the screw cap
CAUTION
before use.
Handle
Adjuster screw
Jaws
Crimp cap
Sample vial
Centered Off-center
No folds or wrinkles Folds and wrinkles
Acceptable Unacceptable
A 1 A L1
B 2 A2 L2
W 3 A3
L3
16 L3 4 A4
15 L2 5 A5 WB
14 6 A6 WB
13 7 B WA
12 8 B2 WA
11 10 9 B3 B4 WA
Standalone turret Transfer turret
(16 samples) (3 samples)
Top views.
17 W Waste bottle
18 B Solvent B bottle
19 A Solvent A bottle
Syringe Size 80% syringe 40% syringe 30% syringe 20% syringe 10% syringe
(µL) volume µL volume µL volume µL volume µL volume µL
5 4 2 1.5 1 0.5
10 8 4 3 2 1
25 20 10 7.5 5 2.5
50 40 20 15 10 5
100 80 40 30 20 10
The number of sample vials given by these equations are estimates. Solvent
CAUTION
characteristics such as evaporation rate and surface tension may affect the capacity of
the bottles.
This equation estimates the maximum number of sample vials you can run
from one solvent bottle.
Maximum number of sample vials per solvent bottle
2000
=
VW x NSI x NSW
where:
VW = Volume of Wash in L taken from Table 14
NSI = Number of sample injections taken from each sample vial
NSW = Number of Solvent washes (pre and post) per sample injected
VWaste
= x W
WWash x NSI x NSS
where:
VWaste = Volume of waste bottles used in L. Use 4000.
Example
A tray is installed with a 3- sample transfer turret in the injector. Your
application parameters are:
• Two injections per vial
• Three washes from solvent bottle A
• Two washes from solvent bottle B
• Two sample washes
• 10- µL syringe
• 80% wash volume (default)
1 Substitute the parameters of your application into the solvent bottle
equation:
For Solvent A
VW = 8 from Table 14
NSI = 2
NSW = 3
Maximum number of sample vials per solvent bottle
2000
= = 41
8 x 2 x 3
For Solvent B
VW = 8 from Table 14
NSI = 2
NSW = 2
Maximum number of sample vials per solvent bottle
2000
= = 62
8 x 2 x 2
12000
= = 187.5
8 x 2 x 4
For Waste B
VWaste = Use 8000 for the 3- sample transfer turret
VWash = 8 from Table 14
NSI = 2
NSS = 2 (solvent B washes) + 1 (sample wash) = 3
Maximum number of sample vials per waste bottles used (WB)
8000
= = 166
8 x 2 x 3
We strongly recommend that all waste positions in all turrets contain bottles at all
CAUTION
times, regardless of which ones are actually used in the current configuration. This
protects against accidental discharge of solvent into the turret body, which could
damage it.
PTFE-tipped syringes must be used to lubricate the barrel wall. Standard syringes, will
CAUTION
fail quickly with limited lubrication.
The solvent wash can be set to use less than the usual 80%. This modifies
the solvent wash process as follows:
1 The syringe draws in solvent to the percent specified, which can be as
little as 10% of the syringe size.
2 The syringe and needle rise out of the solvent bottle.
3 The plunger rises to the 80% mark, rinsing the syringe barrel with
solvent, followed by air.
4 The solvent and air are discharged into a waste bottle.
Confirm that sample carryover (see “Sample Carryover”) is not a problem
with the reduced solvent washes.
Sandwich Injections
The ALS system has the ability to draw liquid from multiple vials to
create multilayered, or sandwich, injections. Each layer of sample, internal
standard, or solvent can be separated by a layer of air (from 0% to 10% of
the syringe size). Figure 55 and Figure 56 show examples of 2- and 3- layer
sandwich injections.
When loading vials for sandwich injections, layer 1 (L1) can be placed in
any turret position 1- 14 if using a standalone turret, or in any tray
position 1- 150 if using a transfer turret with sample tray. The vials for
layer 2 (L2) and layer 3 (L3) must be placed in turret positions L2 and L3
(Figure 57), respectively.
A 1 A L1
B 2 A2 L2
W 3 A3
L3
16 L3 4 A4
15 L2 5 A5 WB
14 6 A6 WB
13 7 B WA
12 8 B2 WA
11 10 9 B3 B4 WA
Standalone turret Transfer turret
Figure 58 Example 2-layer sandwich injection with 2.0 µL of sample and 15 µL of sol-
vent
10
Running Samples
Running a Sample 192
Injection volume 192
Using the ALS Controller 193
Sampler response to interruptions 194
Restarting an interrupted sequence 194
Running a Priority Sample 195
This chapter describes the process for running one or more samples.
Running a Sample
When running a sample, keep your hands away from the syringe needle. The needle
WA R N I N G
is sharp and may contain hazardous chemicals.
Injection volume
The injection volume depends on the sample size and the syringe size.
• Syringe size may be 1 L, 2 L, 5 L, 10 L, 25 L, 50 L, or 100 L
for the standard syringe carriage.
• Syringe size may be 250 µL or 500 µL for the enhanced sample
handling syringe carriage.
• Sample size may be 1- 50% of the syringe size in 1% increments.
Part 4:
Maintenance and Troubleshooting
Maintenance 199
Periodic Maintenance 200
Tray Home and Park Positions 202
Installing a Syringe 203
Removing a Syringe 207
Changing the Turret 208
Adapting for Cool On-Column Injection 212
Replacing the Needle Support Foot 213
Adapting for Syringes Over 100 µL 215
Replacing the Syringe Carriage Assembly 216
Replacing a Syringe Needle 223
Aligning the Injector 225
Aligning the Sample Tray 227
Calibrating the ALS System 229
Replacing Power Fuses in the G4517A ALS Controller 231
Faults and Errors 233
Faults 234
Error Messages 238
Troubleshooting 243
Symptom: Variability 244
Symptom: Contamination or Ghost Peaks 246
Symptom: Smaller or Larger Peaks Than Expected 247
Symptom: Sample Carryover 249
Symptom: No Signal/No Peaks 250
Correcting Syringe Problems 251
Correcting Sample Vial Delivery Problems 252
11
Maintenance
Periodic Maintenance 200
Tray Home and Park Positions 202
Installing a Syringe 203
Removing a Syringe 207
Changing the Turret 208
Adapting for Cool On-Column Injection 212
Replacing the Needle Support Foot 213
Adapting for Syringes Over 100 µL 215
Replacing the Syringe Carriage Assembly 216
Replacing a Syringe Needle 223
Aligning the Injector 225
Aligning the Sample Tray 227
Calibrating the ALS System 229
Replacing Power Fuses in the G4517A ALS Controller 231
The information in this chapter will assist you in keeping the sampler
running smoothly.
Periodic Maintenance
This section contains some suggestions for ensuring good performance of
your Automatic Liquid Sampler system. The maintenance interval varies
with the use of the instrument.
Do not use any lubricants on the Automatic Liquid Sampler. They may affect the
CAUTION
chemical performance of the GC and damage the instrument.
When cleaning the instrument, as described below, use a damp (not wet!), lint-free
CAUTION
cloth. Do not use chemical cleaners.
On an occasional basis:
✔ Calibrate the ALS system. See “Calibrating the ALS System” on
page 229 for details.
✔ Clean the gantry, tray base, vial racks, turrets, and other surfaces.
✔ Wipe away any excess spill remains from the spill tray found
underneath the turret. See “Removing the turret” on page 210 for
details.
✔ Clean the needle support foot and nearby surfaces on the injector. Dust
and dirt accumulate in these areas and can be picked up by the syringe
needle and carried into the inlet.
✔ Inspect the needle support foot for signs of wear, and replace if
necessary. See “Replacing the Needle Support Foot” on page 213 for
details.
✔ Clean the injector surfaces and door.
✔ Vacuum any dust found on or around the vents on the injector or tray.
✔ Make sure the injector mounting post is tight.
✔ Make sure the tray mounting screws are tight.
✔ Make sure the mounting bracket screws are tight.
Installing a Syringe
To install a syringe (Figure 62):
Plunger carrier
Slide
Plunger screw
Needle
Needle support foot
7 Align the syringe flange with the flange guide and press the syringe
into place, keeping the needle end in the guide hole of the needle
support foot. Make sure that the flat edge of the syringe flange faces
out (Figure 63).
Failure to correctly install the syringe flange into the flange guide will result in damage to
NOTE the syringe plunger.
Flange
Flange guide
12 Verify that the needle is inside the guide hole of the needle support
foot. The needle should be straight and pass freely through the needle
guide hole.
If the needle is bent or is outside the guide hole, remove the syringe
and reinstall. See Figure 64 for a properly installed syringe.
14 Do the following only if the injector tower was removed from the
mounting post during installation:
a If necessary, plug in the injector cable.
b Install the injector on the mounting post. See “Installing the G4513A
Injector” on page 43 for details.
c If you have a sample tray, calibrate the ALS system. See “Calibrating
the ALS System” on page 229 for details.
Removing a Syringe
To remove a syringe:
1 Unplug the injector cable, and if desired, mount the injector on a
parking post.
2 Open the injector door.
3 Slide the syringe carriage to the top position.
4 Completely loosen the plunger thumb screw until it reaches the stop,
and lift the plunger carrier off of the syringe plunger.
5 Open the syringe latch by swinging it in a counterclockwise direction.
Be careful not to bend the syringe needle. Only pull the syringe out of the carriage until
CAUTION
clear. The needle bends easily when still seated in the needle support guide.
6 Carefully pull the top of the syringe out of the flange guide, then lift
the needle out of the needle support foot.
To install a syringe, see “Installing a Syringe” on page 203 for details.
A 1 A L1
B 2 A2 L2
W 3 A3
L3
16 L3 4 A4
15 L2 5 A5 WB
14 6 A6 WB
13 7 B WA
12 8 B2 WA
11 10 9 B3 B4 WA
Standalone turret Transfer turret
(16 samples) (3 samples)
Top views.
17 W Waste bottle
18 B Solvent B bottle
19 A Solvent A bottle
Turret cap
Turret
Turret injector
opening
9 Rotate the motor hub so the tabs on the motor hub face outward.
Motor hub
10 Reinstall the turret. Align the inner groove on the turret with the motor
hub tabs, then slide the turret onto the motor hub. The turret should
sit flat on the hub.
11 Reinstall the turret cap. Align the turret cap arms with the turret
injector opening and place the turret cap in place.
Turret injector
opening
Replace the needle support foot when you change injection types or when
the support foot shows signs of wear:
1 Open the injector door.
2 Remove the syringe. See “Removing a Syringe” on page 207 for details.
3 Slide the syringe carriage up to the top position.
4 Completely remove the T- 10 Torx screw from the support foot. Be
careful to not let the screw fall into the turret assembly.
5 Slide off the support foot.
6 Slide on the new support foot.
7 Replace the T- 10 Torx screw and tighten.
7 Completely loosen and remove the T- 10 Torx screw at the top of the
syringe carriage assembly.
8 Slide the syringe carriage assembly completely up until the flange and
latch are accessible.
Plunger carrier
Syringe carriage
Cable Flange
9 Completely loosen and remove the T- 10 Torx screw above the syringe
latch.
13 Slide the syringe carriage assembly completely down until the cable
input jack on the assembly is accessible below the injector casing.
Plunger
Barrel
PTFE disk
Stop
Spring
Cap
Agilent does not recommend performing this procedure unless the Align Mode light turns
NOTE on. It is not necessary to align the turret after changing turrets.
If the top, orange Align Mode light is on, the injector will not operate
again until the alignment procedure has successfully completed.
To align the injector:
1 Remove all vials from the turret.
2 Open the injector door and remove the syringe. See “Removing a
Syringe” on page 207 for details.
3 Close the injector door.
4 Use a long, narrow object to press the recessed Alignment button above
the indicator lights. Avoid contact with anything behind or around the
button inside the recessed hole (Figure 72).
Alignment button
Align Mode
Fault
Ready
If any of these steps fail, the process will halt and the fault light will shine. If it halts at step
NOTE b, confirm that the turret is installed correctly and press the Alignment button again. If it
fails again, unplug the injector, reconnect it, and try one more time before obtaining Agilent
service.
5 When the injector stops and the green Ready light is on, the calibration
is finished.
If this alignment was user- initiated (orange Align Mode light was off
before pressing the Alignment button) and alignment fails, unplug the
injector, reconnect it, and it will reset to the old alignment values.
6 Open the injector door and install the syringe. See “Installing a
Syringe” on page 203 for details.
7 Close the injector door.
Agilent does not recommend performing this procedure unless the Align Mode light turns
NOTE on or if Agilent support requests it to be performed.
If the left, orange Align Mode light is on, the sample tray will not operate
again until the alignment procedure has successfully completed.
To align the sample tray:
1 Use a long, narrow object (such as a pen tip) to press the recessed
Alignment button to the left of the indicator lights. Avoid contact with
anything behind or around the button inside the recessed hole
(Figure 73).
Alignment button
Align Mode
Fault
Ready
The orange Align mode light blinks during the following steps:
a The gripper power calibrates.
b The gantry calibrates the X, Y, and Z home and span settings.
c The gantry is zeroed to calibration position (X, Y, Z).
If any of these steps fail, the process will halt. Press the Alignment button again. If it fails
NOTE again, unplug the sample tray, reconnect it, and try one more time before obtaining Agilent
service.
2 When the sample tray stops in the Home position and the green Ready
light is on, the calibration is finished.
If this alignment was user- initiated (orange Align Mode light was off
before pressing the Alignment button) and alignment fails, unplug the
sample tray, reconnect it, and it will reset to the old alignment values.
2 Remove any vials from transfer turret positions L1, L2, and L3 for all
installed injectors (Figure 75).
L1
L2
L3
Fuses blow for a reason. The most likely cause at first installation is an incorrect power
CAUTION
configuration (see “Verify the power configuration” on page 80). Otherwise, normal
operation should not blow the fuses. If the fuses blow frequently, identify and correct
the problem
2 A 250 VAC
V
250 PE T A
TY A 2
2
Tabs
2 A 250 VAC
12
Faults and Errors
Faults 234
Injector faults 234
Sample tray faults 236
Error Messages 238
Faults
Injector faults
The injector status is indicated by the three lights on the front injector
panel (Figure 77).
During normal operation, the green Ready light is on. If the injector is
busy, the green Ready light is flashing.
If another combination of lights is on, an error has occurred.
Use the information in this chapter to try to solve or identify the problem
before obtaining Agilent service.
All lights are off. • The line voltage to the GC is off. 1 Verify the injector is properly
• The injector cable or connected to the GC.
connection to the GC is bad. 2 Check the power source for your
• Your GC requires service. GC.
3 Obtain Agilent service.
Fault light is on. • The injector door is open. 1 Ensure that the injector door is
• Injector is not properly closed.
mounted to the GC. 2 If the fault light stays on, obtain
Agilent service.
3 Ensure that the injector is
mounted properly. For more
information, see “Installing the
G4513A Injector” on page 43.
4 Ensure the correct mounting post
is installed. See “Installing the
G4513A Injector” on page 43.
5 If the Fault light stays on, obtain
Agilent service.
Align Mode light is on. • The system was not initialized. 1 Verify the turret is properly
• There is an injector memory installed. See “Changing the
error. Turret” on page 208.
2 Perform the alignment procedure
to initialize the system. See
“Aligning the Injector” on
page 225.
3 If alignment fails, obtain Agilent
service.
Align Mode light is • Customer pushed the align 1 The alignment and calibration
flashing. mode button. process is currently underway.
Let the process finish.
All lights are on. • There is a board failure. 1 Check all cable connections.
• There is a firmware revision 2 Turn the instrument off, then on
conflict. again.
3 If the lights remain on, obtain
Agilent service.
All lights are flashing. • Wrong driver board installed. 1 Install the correct driver board.
2 Check firmware revision.
3 If lights remain flashing, obtain
Agilent service.
During normal operation, the green Ready light is on. If the sample tray is
busy, the green Ready light is flashing.
If another combination of lights is on, an error has occurred.
Use the information in this chapter to try to solve the problem before
obtaining Agilent service.
Align Mode light is on. • The system was not initialized. 1 Perform the alignment procedure
• There is a tray memory error. to initialize the system. See
“Aligning the Injector” on
page 225.
2 If alignment fails, obtain Agilent
service.
Align Mode light is • Customer pushed the align 1 The alignment and calibration
flashing. mode button. process is currently underway.
Let the process finish.
All lights are on. • There is a board failure. 1 Check all cable connections.
• There is a firmware revision 2 Turn the instrument off, then on
conflict. again.
3 If the lights remain on, obtain
Agilent service.
All lights are flashing. • Wrong driver board installed. 1 Install the correct driver board.
2 Check firmware revision.
3 If lights remain flashing, obtain
Agilent service.
Error Messages
Table 20 lists the sampler error messages as reported on the GCs. Error
messages are not displayed on 6890A or 6890 Plus GCs. If you receive an
error message that is not shown below, record it. Make sure that your GC
is properly configured and that your sample vials and equipment match
your method and/or sequence. If the problem continues, report your error
message to Agilent service.
Bottle in gripper • The sample vial was not delivered 1 Remove the vial and return it to its
properly and stayed in the tray position in the tray.
gripper. 2 Ensure that the vial racks are
snapped into place.
3 Ensure that the injector is plugged
into the correct connector on the
back of the GC. For 6890, ensure it is
configured properly. See
“Connecting the Cables” on
page 55.
4 Check the deliver to location for the
vial and verify that the location is
empty and free from obstructions.
5 Make sure that the injector is
upright/vertical on the GC.
6 Restart the sequence.
7 If the error occurs again, obtain
Agilent service.
Front (or Back) door open or Injector • See “Faults” on page 234.
not mounted
Front (or Back) injector com error • There is a communications error • Obtain Agilent service.
between the injector and the GC.
Front (or Back) injector incomplete • The syringe needle is bent. 1 See “Correcting Syringe
injection • The plunger or syringe carriage is Problems” on page 251.
operating incorrectly during 2 Remove the syringe from the
injection. injector and check the plunger for
stickiness or binding. Replace the
syringe if necessary.
3 Restart the sequence.
4 If the error occurs again, obtain
Agilent service.
Front (or Back) injector reset • There is an interruption in the power • Obtain Agilent service.
supply from the GC.
Front (or Back) plunger error • The syringe plunger is sticking or 1 Remove the syringe and check it for
not securely connected to the plunger stickiness or binding.
plunger carrier. Replace the syringe if necessary. For
• The plunger solenoid is binding. more information, see “Inspecting a
• The plunger carrier encoder is Syringe” on page 157.
inoperable. 2 Check the viscosity of the sample
against the viscosity parameter.
Reset the viscosity parameter if
necessary.
3 Restart the sequence.
4 If the error occurs again, obtain
Agilent service.
Front (or Back) syringe error • The syringe carriage motor is 1 Ensure the syringe is installed
defective. correctly. For more information, see
• The syringe is not currently installed “Installing a Syringe” on page 158.
or is an incorrect type. 2 Ensure the syringe meets
• The syringe carriage sensor is specifications.
inoperable. 3 If the syringe needle is bent, see
“Correcting Syringe Problems” on
page 251.
4 Restart the sequence.
5 If the error occurs again, obtain
Agilent service.
Front (or Back) turret error • Something has interfered with the 1 Clear any obstructions.
turret rotation. 2 Check the Align Mode light. If it is
• The turret motor/encoder assembly on, perform the alignment
is inoperable. procedure. See “Aligning the
• The turret type was changed while Injector” on page 225.
the power was on and the turret 3 Tighten the top of the turret.
alignment procedure was not 4 If the error occurs again, obtain
performed. Agilent service.
• Turret is loose.
Injector not present • There is a board failure in the 1 Make sure that the injector-to-GC
injector or GC. cable connection is secure.
• The injector cable is bad or not 2 Check your method to make sure it
securely connected to the GC. uses the appropriate injector
• There is a cable failure in the GC. location.
• Your method specifies an incorrect 3 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
injector location (method service.
mismatch).
Injector offline • There is a board failure in the 1 Make sure that the injector to GC
injector or GC. cable connection is secure.
• The injector cable is bad or not 2 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
connected. service.
• There is a cable failure in the GC.
No Bar Code Reader • Bar Code Reader cable not securely 1 Ensure the Bar Code Reader cable
connected. connection is secure.
• Bar Code Reader is defective. 2 If the problem continues, obtain
• Tray is defective. Agilent service.
No bottle in gripper • The sample vial was not found by 1 Make sure that the sample vials are
the gripper. in the locations specified by the
• The gripper could not grasp the vial. sequence.
• The vial was dropped during transfer 2 Make sure that the sample vials
to or from the turret. meet recommended specification.
• The sensor in the gripper is 3 If you are using adhesive labels,
defective. verify that the labels are properly
• The vial does not meet installed. See “Label a sample
specifications. vial” on page 168.
4 If the error recurs frequently, obtain
Agilent service.
Tray not present • There is a board failure in the tray or 1 Make sure that the tray cable
GC. connection is secure.
• The tray cable is bad or not 2 Replace the tray cable.
connected between the GC and tray. 3 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
• There is a cable failure in the GC. service.
Tray offline • There is a board failure in the tray or 1 Make sure that the tray to GC cable
GC. connection is secure.
• The tray cable is bad or not 2 Replace the tray cable.
connected. 3 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
• There is a cable failure in the GC. service.
Invalid sequence • The sequence is set up for the 1 Make sure that the connection to
wrong injection device. the GC is secure.
• Hardware required by the sequence 2 Verify the sequence parameters
is not installed and configured. against the GC configuration.
• The GC configuration was changed 3 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
during sequence execution. service.
• The injector cable is bad or not
connected properly.
No injector • The cabling connection to the GC 1 Make sure that the connection to
became loose during a run. the GC is secure.
• An injector board or GC board failed 2 If the error remains, obtain Agilent
during a run. service.
Prerun >10 min • The GC is Not Ready. • Check for Not Ready and other GC
messages to determine the cause.
Sampler Offline • You are attempting to upload or • Make sure that the connection to
(6890A/Plus GCs Only) download an ALS workfile to an ALS the GC is secure.
system that is not powered on or
connected.
13
Troubleshooting
Symptom: Variability 244
Symptom: Contamination or Ghost Peaks 246
Symptom: Smaller or Larger Peaks Than Expected 247
Symptom: Sample Carryover 249
Symptom: No Signal/No Peaks 250
Correcting Syringe Problems 251
Correcting Sample Vial Delivery Problems 252
The information in this chapter will assist you in keeping the sampler
running smoothly.
If the chromatogram is not satisfactory, clearly something is wrong. Use
this chapter to determine the probable cause and, in many cases, the cure
for the problem.
This chapter deals only with sampler- related problems. However, many of
the symptoms described here could also come from other sources,
particularly the stability of the GC temperature and its gas supplies.
If you cannot correct the problem, obtain Agilent service.
Symptom: Variability
Inlet septum is leaking. If the septum is leaking, replace it. If the septum you replaced
experienced less than 200 injections, check for the following
possible problems to prevent premature septum failure:
• The septum retainer nut is too tight.
• The syringe needle is not straight.
• The syringe is not installed correctly.
Syringe is worn or dirty. If the syringe looks dirty or the plunger is sticking, clean the
syringe with an appropriate solvent or follow the syringe
manufacturer’s cleaning instructions.
Sample volume is too low or too Check sample level. If the sample vials are not filled correctly,
high. evaporation or contamination may affect the analysis. The
sample level hold will be approximately half the volume of the
vial. See “Fill a sample vial” on page 169.
Vial caps are loose. Check vial caps. If you can turn the vial crimp cap by hand,
they are too loose. Loose caps may cause volatile samples to
change concentration over time. See “Cap a sample vial” on
page 170.
Screw caps, if not sufficiently tight, can come loose in the
mixer and even come off.
Sample is not stable. Check the sample stability. Some samples change with heat
or ultraviolet light. There are several ways to reduce changes
to unstable samples:
• Use the vial racks to cool the sample.
• Use amber sample vials.
• Store the samples in a protected environment.
Sample size varies. Install a new syringe. If the sample size varies, the syringe is
probably not precise or the plunger is worn. Variation may be
due to syringes with removable needles because of dead
volume or needle-to-needle variation.
Air bubbles are in the needle. If air bubbles are in the needle, user variable speed and a
sample draw speed slow enough to avoid bubble formation.
See “Setting the Injector Parameters” on page 142.
If this does not help and the sample is viscous, try the
following:
• Increase the viscosity delay time.
• Use the vial racks to warm the sample.
• Dilute the sample in an appropriate low-viscosity
solvent.
Sample vials are contaminated. Ghost peaks are sometimes caused by contaminated sample
vials. Try new or clean vials to see if ghost peaks disappear.
Store new vials in a contaminant-free location.
Inlet septum is giving off volatiles. Make several blank runs with a small piece of aluminum foil
backing the inlet septum. If the contamination peaks
disappear, they were probably due to the septum. Try
replacing the septum you usually use with another type.
Automated injection
Manual injection
You are comparing a Check your injection mode. In the normal injection mode, the
chromatogram without needle sampler uses fast injection to deliver a representative amount
fractionation against one with of the sample. Fast injection minimize needle fractionation.
needle fractionation. Chromatograms from manual injection or slower auto
injection devices show higher levels of low molecular weight
materials versus higher molecular weight materials because
the volatiles boil out of the needle faster than the higher
weight materials.
You are using a packed inlet and a Check your inlet. Capillary columns used with packed inlets
530-µm column. have some inherent sample discrimination characteristics.
There is a leak in the GC system. Replace the septum and check the fitting for leaks. If the
leaking septum has experienced less than 200 injections.
To prevent future premature failures, be sure that:
• The septum retainer nut is not too tight.
• The syringe needle is straight.
• The syringe is installed correctly.
Sample is not stable. Some samples change with heat or ultraviolet light. Check the
sample stability. There are several ways to reduce the change:
• Use the vial racks to cool the sample.
• Use amber sample vials.
• Store the samples in a protected environment.
Vial caps are loose. Check the vial caps. Loose vial caps can cause selective loss
of lighter materials from a sample. The cap should not rotate
easily if installed properly. See “Cap a sample vial” on
page 170.
Number or type of washes is Check the run parameters for the number of sample and
insufficient. solvent washes. The number of washes needed depends on
your application. See “Sample Carryover” on page 122.
You ran out of solvent. Check the solvent bottles. If the solvent level is below 2.5 mL,
the syringe cannot reach the solvent. Replace the remaining
solvent with 4 to 4.5 mL of fresh solvent. See “Preparing
Solvent and Waste Bottles” on page 172.
Check the waste bottles. If the waste level is near the neck of
the bottle, replace it with an empty bottle.
Syringe is worn or dirty. If the syringe look dirty or the plunger is sticking, clean the
syringe with an appropriate solvent or follow the syringe
manufacturer’s cleaning instructions. If the syringe seems
worn, replace it.
Samples (vial-to-vial) are of In this situation, the sample and solvent washes may not
immiscible types. rinse the syringe properly. Increase the number of wash
cycles or use a solvent that rinses a variety of sample types.
Syringe plunger is malfunctioning. Verify that the syringe plunger is secured by the plunger
screw. If the plunger screw is loose, tighten it. See“Installing
a Syringe” on page 158.
Check the syringe needle for plugging. If the syringe is
plugged, replace or clean the syringe.
Sample level is too low in vial. If there is no or very little sample in the vial, the needle may
not be able to reach it. See “Fill a sample vial” on page 169.
Alternately, you may edit your method to adjust the needle
sampling depth. See Sampling offset in “Setting the Injector
Parameters” on page 142.
When troubleshooting the injector, keep your hands away from the syringe needle.
WA R N I N G
The needle is sharp and may contain hazardous chemicals.
Several things can cause syringe needles to bend. When you find one,
check for the following conditions before installing a replacement:
Was the syringe installed properly in the syringe carriage?
Are you using the correct syringe type? Is the combined length of the
syringe barrel and needle 126.5 mm? For more information, see
“Selecting a Syringe” on page 154.
Is the needle support foot clean? Remove any residue or septum
deposits. For more information, see “Periodic Maintenance” on
page 200.
If performing a cool on- column injection, is the correct insert for your
syringe installed in the cool on- column inlet? For more information, see
“Adapting for Cool On- Column Injection” on page 212.
Is the GC septum nut too tight? For more information, see your GC
operating documentation.
Is the septum of the crimp cap centered over the sample vial? For more
information, see “Cap a sample vial” on page 170.
Are the inside diameters of the sample vial, microvial insert, and vial
cap septum at least 5 mm? For more information, see “Preparing a
Sample Vial” on page 166.
14
Replacement Parts
G4513A Injector 254
G4514A Sample Tray 256
G4517A ALS Controller (6890A GC Only) 258
G4516A ALS Interface Board (6890 Plus GC Only) 260
The following pages list the replacement parts for the 7693A ALS system.
Also refer to the Agilent web site at www.agilent.com/chem for the most
up- to- date replacement part and firmware listings.
G4513A Injector
Table 26 and Figure 82 list and show the replacement parts for the
G4513A Injector module.
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8
6 M6 × 25 screw 0515-0192 3
3
2
4 5
1 7
8 9
13
10
12
11
Replacement of internal fuses and the battery can expose the servicing person to
WA R N I N G
hazardous voltages and also exposes the controller to damage. Replacement is not
covered in this manual. Refer servicing to qualified, Agilent-trained personnel.
1 220-240 V
USE ONLY WITH 250V
FUSES/EMPLOYER
UNIQUEMENT AVEC
DES FUSIBLES DE 250V
110-120 V
Back panel
V
250 PE T A 2
TY A 2
2