Gas Liquid chromatography (GLC) is a type of gas chromatography (GC) that uses a mobile gas phase and a stationary liquid phase to separate and analyze volatile compounds in a mixture.
It is also known as gas liquid partition chromatography (GLPC), as it separates compounds based on their partition between the gas phase and the liquid phase.

GLC was first developed in the early 1950s by Archer J. P. Martin and Anthony T. James. It is based on the principle of partition chromatography introduced by Martin and Richard L.M. Synge, who were awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1952 for their…