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Dive into the research topics where Glenn S. Frysinger is active.

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Featured researches published by Glenn S. Frysinger.


Hrc-journal of High Resolution Chromatography | 1999

Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography with Mass Spectrometric Detection (GC × GC/MS) Applied to the Analysis of Petroleum

Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines

Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometric detection (GC × GC/MS) is a three-dimensional analytical method. In its application to petroleum analysis, the high peak capacity of GC × GC produced chromatographic resolution of over 750 peaks from a marine diesel fuel. The MS detector provided a full-scan mass spectrum for each resolved peak. The integration of an MS detector with GC × GC provides increased capability to identify minor components, determine members of homologous series, and characterize ordered peak patterns of related components that are visible in the GC × GC chromatogram.


Journal of Separation Science | 2001

Separation and identification of petroleum biomarkers by comprehensive two‐dimensional gas chromatography

Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines

Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC×GC) has been used to separate and identify biomarker molecules in crude oil. The biomarkers examined include alkylated aromatics (naphthalenes, biphenyls, fluorenes, phenanthrenes, chrysenes), sulfur-containing aromatics (dibenzothiophenes, benzonaphthothiophenes), steranes, triterpanes, and triaromatic steranes. These biomarkers, which are frequently used in forensic oil spill analysis and petroleum exploration, were separated into easily recognizable bands in the GC×GC chromatogram. Methods used to identify the bands included peak matching with chemical standards, comparison with GC/MS extracted ion chromatograms, and the application of chemical logic based on the known volatility and polarity properties of the biomarkers.


Hrc-journal of High Resolution Chromatography | 1999

Quantitative Determination of BTEX and Total Aromatic Compounds in Gasoline by Comprehensive Two‐Dimensional Gas Chromatography (GC×GC)

Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines; Edward B. Ledford

Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC×GC) has been applied to the quantitative analysis of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, xylenes (BTEX), and all heavier aromatic compounds in gasoline. The two-dimensional chromatographic separation used volatility selection on the first-dimension column and polarity selection on the second-dimension column. In the resulting GC×GC chromatogram, aromatic species were resolved from other compound classes. Moreover, structurally related aromatics were grouped in a manner that facilitated identification and integration. The response of a flame ionization detector to each major aromatic group in gasoline was calibrated using internal standards. Quantitation produced results directly comparable with ASTM standard methods. The present GC×GC method can be expanded to analyze other gasoline components.


Environmental Forensics | 2006

Tracking the Weathering of an Oil Spill with Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography

Robert K. Nelson; Brian M. Kile; Desiree L. Plata; Sean P. Sylva; Li Xu; Christopher M. Reddy; Richard B. Gaines; Glenn S. Frysinger; Stephen E. Reichenbach

Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC × GC) was used to investigate the Bouchard 120 oil spill. The latter occurred on April 25, 2003, when the barge Bouchard 120 spilled ∼ 375,000 liters of No. 6 fuel oil into Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. In order to gain a better understanding of the natural processes affecting the fate of the spilled product, we collected and analyzed oil-covered rocks from Nyes Neck beach in North Falmouth, Massachusetts. Here we discuss the data from samples collected on May 9, 2003, and six months later, on November 23, 2003. Along with standard two-dimensional gas chromatographic analysis, we employed unique data-visualization techniques such as difference, ratio, and addition chromatograms to highlight how evaporation, water washing, and biodegradation weathered the spilled oil. These approaches provide a new perspective to studying oil spills and aid attempts to remediate them.


Organic Geochemistry | 2001

Identification of a novel alkenone in Black Sea sediments

Li Xu; Christopher M. Reddy; John W. Farrington; Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines; Carl G. Johnson; Robert K. Nelson; Timothy I. Eglinton

Abstract We report the identification of a novel long-chain ketone in Holocene Black Sea sediments. Based on chemical properties, and chromatographic and mass spectrometric characteristics, this compound has been identified as a di-unsaturated C36 ethyl ketone. Further analyses indicated the position and configuration of the double bonds, and the novel alkenone was determined to be hexatriaconta-(16E,21E)-dien-3-one. While this compound is present in only trace quantities in Unit I sediments, it is the most abundant alkenone in portions of Unit II. Its presence thus apparently pre-dates the invasion of Emiliania huxleyi in the Black Sea. The down-core profiles and isotopic compositions suggest that the precursor for the C36:2 alkenone may be distinct from that of the C37-39 alkenones, however the biological origin of this novel compound is presently unknown.


Journal of Forensic Sciences | 2002

Forensic Analysis of Ignitable Liquids in Fire Debris by Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography

Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines

The application of comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC x GC) for the forensic analysis of ignitable liquids in fire debris is reported. GC x GC is a high resolution, multidimensional gas chromatographic method in which each component of a complex mixture is subjected to two independent chromatographic separations. The high resolving power of GC x GC can separate hundreds of chemical components from a complex fire debris extract. The GC x GC chromatogram is a multicolor plot of two-dimensional retention time and detector signal intensity that is well suited for rapid identification and fingerprinting of ignitable liquids. GC x GC chromatograms were used to identify and classify ignitable liquids, detect minor differences between similar ignitable liquids, track the chemical changes associated with weathering, characterize the chemical composition of fire debris pyrolysates, and detect weathered ignitable liquids against a background of fire debris pyrolysates.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Molecular evidence of Late Archean archaea and the presence of a subsurface hydrothermal biosphere.

G. T. Ventura; Fabien Kenig; Christopher M. Reddy; Juergen Schieber; Glenn S. Frysinger; Robert K. Nelson; Etienne Dinel; Richard B. Gaines; Philippe Schaeffer

Highly cracked and isomerized archaeal lipids and bacterial lipids, structurally changed by thermal stress, are present in solvent extracts of 2,707- to 2,685-million-year-old (Ma) metasedimentary rocks from Timmins, ON, Canada. These lipids appear in conventional gas chromatograms as unresolved complex mixtures and include cyclic and acyclic biphytanes, C36–C39 derivatives of the biphytanes, and C31–C35 extended hopanes. Biphytane and extended hopanes are also found in high-pressure catalytic hydrogenation products released from solvent-extracted sediments, indicating that archaea and bacteria were present in Late Archean sedimentary environments. Postdepositional, hydrothermal gold mineralization and graphite precipitation occurred before metamorphism (≈2,665 Ma). Late Archean metamorphism significantly reduced the kerogens adsorptive capacity and severely restricted sediment porosity, limiting the potential for post-Archean additions of organic matter to the samples. Argillites exposed to hydrothermal gold mineralization have disproportionately high concentrations of extractable archaeal and bacterial lipids relative to what is releasable from their respective high-pressure catalytic hydrogenation product and what is observed for argillites deposited away from these hydrothermal settings. The addition of these lipids to the sediments likely results from a Late Archean subsurface hydrothermal biosphere of archaea and bacteria.


Hrc-journal of High Resolution Chromatography | 2000

Determination of Oxygenates in Gasoline by GC×GC

Glenn S. Frysinger; Richard B. Gaines

Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC × GC) has been applied to the quantitation of oxygenates in reformulated gasoline. Target oxygenates were C 1 -C 4 alcohols, tert-pentanol, methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), diisopropyl ether (DIPE), ethyl tert-butyl ether (ETBE), and tert-amyl methyl ether (TAME). These were separated from the gasoline matrix using a volatility-based selectivity in the first chromatographic dimension, followed by a mixed-phase polarity/shape selectivity in the second dimension. The high resolving power of this stationary phase combination completely separated all oxygenates except DIPE, ETBE, and TAME, which exhibited coelution with other nonpolar gasoline components. Oxygenates quantitation was achieved with the use of an internal standard, an FID detector, and calibration curves. Quantitation results are in good agreement with ASTM and EPA standard methods. When coupled with our previous method for BTEX and aromatics, a single GC × GC method can now quantitate MTBE, alcohols, BTEX, and aromatics in a one-hour analysis.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2009

Isomer-specific determination of 4-nonylphenols using comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography/time-of-flight mass spectrometry.

Robert P. Eganhouse; James Pontolillo; Richard B. Gaines; Glenn S. Frysinger; Frédéric L. P. Gabriel; Hans-Peter E. Kohler; Walter Giger; Larry B. Barber

Technical nonylphenol (tNP), used for industrial production of nonylphenol polyethoxylate surfactants, is a complex mixture of C(3-10)-phenols. The major components, 4-nonylphenols, are weak endocrine disruptors whose estrogenicities vary according to the structure of the branched nonyl group. Thus, accurate risk assessment requires isomer-specific determination of 4-NPs. Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography/time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC x GC/ToFMS) was used to characterize tNP samples obtained from seven commercial suppliers. Under optimal chromatographic conditions, 153-204 alkylphenol peaks, 59-66 of which were identified as 4-NPs, were detected. The 4-NPs comprised approximately 86-94% of tNP, with 2-NPs and decylphenols making up approximately 2-9% and approximately 2-5%, respectively. The tNP products were analyzed for eight synthetic 4-NP isomers, and results were compared with published data based on GC/MS analysis. Significant differences were found among the products and between two samples from a single supplier. The enhanced resolution of GC x GC coupled with fast mass spectral data acquisition by ToFMS facilitated identification of all major 4-NP isomers and a number of previously unrecognized components. Analysis of tNP altered by the bacterium, Sphingobium xenophagum Bayram, revealed several persistent 4-NPs whose structures and estrogenicities are presently unknown. The potential of this technology for isomer-specific determination of 4-NP isomers in environmental matrices is demonstrated using samples of wastewater-contaminated groundwater and municipal wastewater.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2013

Oxygenated weathering products of Deepwater Horizon oil come from surprising precursors

Gregory J. Hall; Glenn S. Frysinger; Christoph Aeppli; Catherine A. Carmichael; Jonas Gros; Karin L. Lemkau; Robert K. Nelson; Christopher M. Reddy

Following the release of crude oil from the Macondo well in 2010, a wide range of weathering processes acted on the spilled oil. A recent study revealed that samples from this spill were oxidized into oxygenated hydrocarbons (OxHC) comprising more than 50% of the extracted hydrocarbons. The precursors of these compounds were not identified despite using a wide range of analytical tools, including gas chromatography (GC). To search for these precursors, over 40 samples were analyzed by comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography (GC×GC), one of the largest studies of its kind to date. Partial least squares regression was employed to elucidate the GC×GC peaks that could be the precursors of OxHC in our samples. We found that the formation of OxHC correlated with the disappearance of saturated hydrocarbons, including alkylcyclopentanes, alkyl cyclohexanes, alkylated bicyclic saturated compounds, tricyclic terpanpoids, and alkylbenzenes. These results indicate a previously under-reported chemodynamic process in oil spill weathering.

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Richard B. Gaines

United States Coast Guard Academy

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Christopher M. Reddy

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Robert K. Nelson

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Gregory J. Hall

United States Coast Guard Academy

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Li Xu

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Fabien Kenig

University of Illinois at Chicago

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G. T. Ventura

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Carl G. Johnson

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Christoph Aeppli

Bigelow Laboratory For Ocean Sciences

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Emily E. Peacock

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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