Residual Monomer in Poly Methyl Methacrylate Analysis using the CDS Model 6500 Autosampler
Applications | | CDS AnalyticalInstrumentation
Detecting trace residual monomer in polymeric materials like poly methyl methacrylate (PMMA) is essential for quality control, safety and performance in industrial and research settings. Thermal desorption offers a solvent-free, sensitive alternative to traditional solvent extraction, reducing sample preparation steps and eliminating solvent disposal issues.
This application note evaluates the use of a CDS Model 6500 Dynamic Headspace/Thermal Desorption Autosampler coupled to an HP 5890 GC-FID for determining residual methyl methacrylate (MMA) in PMMA. Key goals include:
Samples of 1 g PMMA were placed in a 36 mm chamber, heated at 100 °C and purged with helium. Volatiles were trapped on Tenax for 20 min, then thermally desorbed at 300 °C into a 0.53 mm SE-54 GC column (30 m) interfaced without split to maximize sensitivity. The GC oven ramped from 40 °C to 290 °C at 10 °C/min. Detection was by flame ionization (FID). Key parameters:
The first thermal desorption run produced a distinct MMA peak corresponding to residual monomer in the PMMA. A second run on the same sample showed negligible MMA signal, confirming the absence of monomer generation via thermal degradation. Triplicate analyses showed less than 6 % variation in peak areas, underlining method reproducibility. The absence of a large solvent peak enabled clear detection of trace MMA and full sample introduction improved sensitivity.
Thermal desorption sample handling:
Advancements may include coupling thermal desorption with mass spectrometry for compound confirmation, expanding applications to other polymeric matrices, integrating automated data processing, and developing miniaturized headspace systems for on-site testing. Enhanced trap materials and multi-dimensional GC could further improve selectivity and resolution.
The CDS Model 6500 thermal desorption autosampler combined with GC-FID provides a reliable, solvent-free approach for quantifying residual MMA in PMMA. Its high sensitivity, reproducibility and ease of automation make it highly suitable for routine quality control and research laboratories.
1. T. P. Wampler, Thermal Desorption for GC Sample Preparation, LC GC, 16(3) 812 (1998)
2. T. P. Wampler, Analysis of Food Volatiles using Headspace-GC Techniques, in R. Marsili (Ed.) Techniques for Analyzing Food Aroma, Marcel Dekker, New York, 1997.
GC, HeadSpace
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, CDS Analytical
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Detecting trace residual monomer in polymeric materials like poly methyl methacrylate (PMMA) is essential for quality control, safety and performance in industrial and research settings. Thermal desorption offers a solvent-free, sensitive alternative to traditional solvent extraction, reducing sample preparation steps and eliminating solvent disposal issues.
Objectives and Overview of the Study
This application note evaluates the use of a CDS Model 6500 Dynamic Headspace/Thermal Desorption Autosampler coupled to an HP 5890 GC-FID for determining residual methyl methacrylate (MMA) in PMMA. Key goals include:
- Demonstrating complete capture and transfer of residual monomer without sample degradation
- Assessing sensitivity and reproducibility compared to solvent-based methods
- Validating that detected MMA originates from the sample, not from thermal breakdown
Methodology and Instrumentation
Samples of 1 g PMMA were placed in a 36 mm chamber, heated at 100 °C and purged with helium. Volatiles were trapped on Tenax for 20 min, then thermally desorbed at 300 °C into a 0.53 mm SE-54 GC column (30 m) interfaced without split to maximize sensitivity. The GC oven ramped from 40 °C to 290 °C at 10 °C/min. Detection was by flame ionization (FID). Key parameters:
- Trap purge flow: 50 mL/min He
- Trap desorption: 300 °C for 4 min
- GC initial hold: 40 °C for 2 min; final hold: 290 °C for 10 min
Main Results and Discussion
The first thermal desorption run produced a distinct MMA peak corresponding to residual monomer in the PMMA. A second run on the same sample showed negligible MMA signal, confirming the absence of monomer generation via thermal degradation. Triplicate analyses showed less than 6 % variation in peak areas, underlining method reproducibility. The absence of a large solvent peak enabled clear detection of trace MMA and full sample introduction improved sensitivity.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
Thermal desorption sample handling:
- Eliminates solvent use, reducing waste and cost
- Enhances sensitivity by avoiding solvent peak masking
- Enables complete transfer of analytes from the entire sample
- Offers robust reproducibility suitable for QC and R&D workflows
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advancements may include coupling thermal desorption with mass spectrometry for compound confirmation, expanding applications to other polymeric matrices, integrating automated data processing, and developing miniaturized headspace systems for on-site testing. Enhanced trap materials and multi-dimensional GC could further improve selectivity and resolution.
Conclusion
The CDS Model 6500 thermal desorption autosampler combined with GC-FID provides a reliable, solvent-free approach for quantifying residual MMA in PMMA. Its high sensitivity, reproducibility and ease of automation make it highly suitable for routine quality control and research laboratories.
Reference
1. T. P. Wampler, Thermal Desorption for GC Sample Preparation, LC GC, 16(3) 812 (1998)
2. T. P. Wampler, Analysis of Food Volatiles using Headspace-GC Techniques, in R. Marsili (Ed.) Techniques for Analyzing Food Aroma, Marcel Dekker, New York, 1997.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Bulk Headspace Sampling - Apples and Oranges
|CDS Analytical|Applications
#63 APPLICATION NOTE #63 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING ADVANCED SAMPLE HANDLING TECHNOLOGY Bulk Headspace Sampling - Apples and Oranges Figure 2 shows the results for a Red Delicious apple sampled using the same method. For maximum sensitivity, the gas chromatograph was…
Key words
sampling, samplingvessel, vesselvolatiles, volatilesuncut, uncutbulk, bulkheadspace, headspaceoranges, orangesallowed, allowedapples, applescontacting, contactingbackflushed, backflushedobject, objecttenax, tenaxapplications, applicationssealed
Analysis of Volatiles from Printed Circuit Boards
|Agilent Technologies|Applications
#64 APPLICATION NOTE #64 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING ADVANCED SAMPLE HANDLING TECHNOLOGY Analysis of Volatiles from Printed Circuit Boards With the CDS Model 6500 Thermal Desorption Autosampler The volatile materials released from electronic components such as printed circuit boards may be…
Key words
boards, boardscircuit, circuitdesorbed, desorbedxylene, xylenebundanc, bundancwarmed, warmedcds, cdsfrom, fromprinted, printedtrap, trapdichlorobenzene, dichlorobenzenecontacting, contactingpressurize, pressurizechambers, chambersbenzaldehyde
Dynamic Headspace Analysis of Fragrance Products
|Agilent Technologies|Applications
#57 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING ADVANCED SAMPLE HANDLING TECHNOLOGY Dynamic Headspace Analysis of Fragrance Products 3.0e4 2.5e4 2.0e4 1.5e4 Sig. 1 in C:\HPCHEM\1\DATA\FRAG0018.D Personal fragrance products are complex blends of natural and synthetic materials carefully formulated to produce a characteristic aroma.…
Key words
fragrance, fragrancestrip, stripblotter, blotterheadspace, headspacesplitless, splitlesshewlett, hewlettpackard, packarddynamic, dynamicmarketed, marketedbackflushed, backflushedfragrances, fragrancesformulated, formulatedblends, blendsinterfaced, interfacedapplications
Formaldehyde Detection using PFPH and Thermal Desorption with the CDS 9300 TDA Autosampler
|CDS Analytical|Applications
#126 olutions APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING ADVANCED SAMPLE HANDLING TECHNOLOGY Formaldehyde Detection using PFPH and Thermal Desorption with the CDS 9300 TDA Autosampler Formaldehyde is a chemical widely used in industry, including the manufacture of construction materials as well as certain…
Key words
pfph, pfphformaldehyde, formaldehydepentfluorophenyl, pentfluorophenylqualitation, qualitationhydrazone, hydrazonehydrazine, hydrazinegraduate, graduatethermal, thermalolutions, olutionsusing, usinghazard, hazardtenax, tenaxderivative, derivativecausing, causingrecommend