What is a Kováts retention index in gas chromatography, and how do I calculate it?

1 Answer
Jun 23, 2015

The Kováts retention index (or Kováts index) of a compound is its retention time normalized to the retention times of adjacently eluting n-alkanes.

Explanation:

It depends on the fact that logt ∝ nlogtn, where tt is the retention time and nn is the number of carbon atoms in the alkane.

For an isothermal chrtomatogram, you use the following equation to calculate the Kováts index, II:

I = 100 × [n + (logt_x– logt_n)/(logt_(n+1) –logt_n)], where

n is the number of carbon atoms in the n-alkane, and t is the retention time.

First, you run a chromatogram of a standard alkane mixture in the range of interest, say from "C-8" to "C-16".

You might get something like the chromatogram below.

massfinder.com

Then you do a co-injection of your sample with the standard alkanes.

Assume that the retention times were: sample = 3.12 min; "C-9" = 2.71 min;
"C-10" = 3.89 min. Then the Kováts index for your sample is

I = 100 × [n + (logt_x– logt_n)/(logt_(n+1) –logt_n)] = 100 × [9 + (log3.12 – log2.71)/(log3.89 – log2.71)] = 939

Even many years later and in a different laboratory, you can reproduce this retention index even though your old retention times no longer have any meaning..