Measurement of VOCs in Vehicle Interiors Using Thermal Desorption GC-MS with Nitrogen as the Carrier Gas
Applications | 2022 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
The monitoring of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in confined spaces such as vehicle interiors is critical for assessing human exposure to potentially toxic chemicals and ensuring compliance with safety standards. Thermal desorption GC-MS offers a solvent-free approach with high throughput, while the use of nitrogen as a carrier gas addresses recent shortages and cost concerns associated with helium.
This work aimed to evaluate the feasibility of measuring nine target VOCs in vehicle cabin air using a Shimadzu TD-30R thermal desorption unit coupled to a GCMS-QP2020 NX, with nitrogen replacing helium as the carrier gas. Key goals included:
Samples were collected on TENAX-TA tubes, spiked with internal standard toluene-d8, and thermally desorbed into a cold trap before GC-MS analysis. Major parameters:
Calibration curves for nine VOCs (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o-, m,p-xylenes, styrene, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, tetradecane) demonstrated excellent linearity (R² > 0.999) across 10–1000 ng. Repeatability at 10 ng yielded percent relative standard deviations (%RSD) ≤ 5% for initial desorption and ≤ 6% after retrapping. The retrapping function did not adversely affect precision and provided an additional correction factor for split-sample analysis.
Adopting nitrogen carrier gas:
Thermal desorption with automatic internal standard addition and retrapping enhances throughput and data quality, making the method ideal for routine screening of vehicle cabins and other indoor environments.
Emerging directions include:
This study validated a nitrogen-based thermal desorption GC-MS method for sensitive and reproducible determination of key VOCs in vehicle interiors. The approach offers a reliable alternative to helium, combining high throughput with robust quantitation via internal standard addition and retrapping.
No formal references were provided in the source document.
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The monitoring of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in confined spaces such as vehicle interiors is critical for assessing human exposure to potentially toxic chemicals and ensuring compliance with safety standards. Thermal desorption GC-MS offers a solvent-free approach with high throughput, while the use of nitrogen as a carrier gas addresses recent shortages and cost concerns associated with helium.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work aimed to evaluate the feasibility of measuring nine target VOCs in vehicle cabin air using a Shimadzu TD-30R thermal desorption unit coupled to a GCMS-QP2020 NX, with nitrogen replacing helium as the carrier gas. Key goals included:
- Assessing calibration linearity over a 10–1000 ng range.
- Determining repeatability at low concentration levels (10 ng).
- Verifying the efficiency of the instrument’s retrapping function.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Samples were collected on TENAX-TA tubes, spiked with internal standard toluene-d8, and thermally desorbed into a cold trap before GC-MS analysis. Major parameters:
- Carrier gas: nitrogen at 40 cm/s linear velocity.
- Desorption: 280 °C for 10 min, 60 mL/min flow.
- GC column: SH-5MS (30 m × 0.25 mm, 0.25 µm).
- Oven program: 40 °C (1 min) → 100 °C at 10 °C/min → 200 °C at 40 °C/min → 300 °C at 20 °C/min (5 min).
- MS detection: scan mode, m/z 45–600, source 230 °C, interface 280 °C.
- Automatic internal standard addition and sample retrapping were used to improve quantitation and reliability.
Main Results and Discussion
Calibration curves for nine VOCs (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, o-, m,p-xylenes, styrene, 1,4-dichlorobenzene, tetradecane) demonstrated excellent linearity (R² > 0.999) across 10–1000 ng. Repeatability at 10 ng yielded percent relative standard deviations (%RSD) ≤ 5% for initial desorption and ≤ 6% after retrapping. The retrapping function did not adversely affect precision and provided an additional correction factor for split-sample analysis.
Benefits and Practical Applications
Adopting nitrogen carrier gas:
- Reduces dependency on scarce helium supplies and lowers operating costs.
- Maintains high sensitivity suitable for trace-level VOC monitoring.
Thermal desorption with automatic internal standard addition and retrapping enhances throughput and data quality, making the method ideal for routine screening of vehicle cabins and other indoor environments.
Future Trends and Applications
Emerging directions include:
- Integration of real-time feedback controls for dynamic desorption and trapping cycles.
- Expansion to broader VOC panels and polar compounds through advanced sorbent tubes and cold trap technologies.
- Coupling with portable GC-MS systems for on-site air quality assessments in vehicles, buildings, and occupational settings.
Conclusion
This study validated a nitrogen-based thermal desorption GC-MS method for sensitive and reproducible determination of key VOCs in vehicle interiors. The approach offers a reliable alternative to helium, combining high throughput with robust quantitation via internal standard addition and retrapping.
References
No formal references were provided in the source document.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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