Characterization of Industrial Plastics Using Pyrolysis With Atmospheric Pressure Gas Chromatography Coupled to High- Resolution Mass Spectrometry
Applications | 2023 | WatersInstrumentation
With growing emphasis on circular economies and sustainable materials, accurately characterizing recycled plastics ensures product safety and performance in industrial applications.
This study develops an analytical workflow combining pyrolysis with atmospheric pressure gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (APGC-HRMS) and multivariate statistics to differentiate virgin and recycled polyamide-based plastics and identify chemical markers unique to each sample type.
Samples of virgin pellets, recycled regrinds, and molded gears were analyzed. Each ~0.2 mg sample underwent single-shot pyrolysis at 600 °C. Volatile products were separated on an Rtx-5MS column via an Agilent 7890 GC and ionized softly using APGC, followed by QTof HRMS acquisition in MSE mode. Data processing and library screening were performed in UNIFI, and PCA/OPLS-DA statistical analyses utilized EZInfo.
Base peak intensity pyrograms highlighted the complex mixture of pyrolyzates. Library screening detected common pyrolysis products across samples but could not alone resolve differences. PCA clearly separated blanks, virgin, and recycled plastics, while OPLS-DA S-plots identified ions significantly upregulated in each group. Tentative identification of markers, such as N-vinylcaprolactam and 4-(1-methyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)-4-propoxypiperidine, was achieved using accurate masses, isotope pattern matching, and in silico fragmentation in UNIFI’s Discovery Tool.
Advances may include integration of machine learning for automatic marker discovery, expanding spectral libraries for a broader range of polymers, and coupling with complementary techniques to enhance structural characterization. Regulatory demand for recycled plastic traceability will drive adoption of these hyphenated approaches.
The combined pyrolysis-APGC-HRMS and multivariate statistical strategy provides a robust, high-throughput method to characterize and distinguish virgin versus recycled industrial plastics, aiding quality control and supporting circular economy initiatives.
1. European Commission. A European Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy. 2018.
2. Tsuge S., Ohtani H., Watanabe C. Pyrolysis-GC/MS Data Book of Synthetic Polymers. 2011.
3. Plumb R., Johnson K., Rainville P., et al. UPLC/MSE: A New Approach for Generating Molecular Fragment Information for Biomarker Structure Elucidation. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2006;20:1984–1994.
4. Stevens D., Cabovska B., Bailey A. Detection and Identification of Extractable Compounds from Polymers. Waters Application Note 720004211. 2012.
5. Riches E., Goshawk J., Da Costa J., Jones G. Discrimination Between Commercial Lubricant Oils Using Mass Spectrometry and Multivariate Analysis within UNIFI. Waters Application Note 720006406. 2018.
6. Schweighuber A., Gall M., Fisher J., et al. Development of an LC-MS Method for the Semiquantitative Determination of Polyamide 6 Contamination in Polyolefin Recyclates. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2021;413:1091–1098.
7. Cabovska B. Screening Workflow for Extractable Testing Using the UNIFI Scientific Information System. Technical Note 720005688. 2016.
GC/MSD, GC/HRMS, GC/TOF, GC/Q-TOF, GC/API/MS, LC/TOF, LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Importance of the Topic
With growing emphasis on circular economies and sustainable materials, accurately characterizing recycled plastics ensures product safety and performance in industrial applications.
Objectives and Overview
This study develops an analytical workflow combining pyrolysis with atmospheric pressure gas chromatography-high resolution mass spectrometry (APGC-HRMS) and multivariate statistics to differentiate virgin and recycled polyamide-based plastics and identify chemical markers unique to each sample type.
Methodology
Samples of virgin pellets, recycled regrinds, and molded gears were analyzed. Each ~0.2 mg sample underwent single-shot pyrolysis at 600 °C. Volatile products were separated on an Rtx-5MS column via an Agilent 7890 GC and ionized softly using APGC, followed by QTof HRMS acquisition in MSE mode. Data processing and library screening were performed in UNIFI, and PCA/OPLS-DA statistical analyses utilized EZInfo.
Instrumentation Used
- FrontierLab EGA/PY-3030D Pyrolyzer
- Agilent 7890 GC with Rtx-5MS (30 m×0.25 mm, 0.25 µm)
- Waters APGC source and Xevo G2-XS QTof MS
- Waters MassLynx 4.2, UNIFI, and EZInfo 3.0 software
Main Results and Discussion
Base peak intensity pyrograms highlighted the complex mixture of pyrolyzates. Library screening detected common pyrolysis products across samples but could not alone resolve differences. PCA clearly separated blanks, virgin, and recycled plastics, while OPLS-DA S-plots identified ions significantly upregulated in each group. Tentative identification of markers, such as N-vinylcaprolactam and 4-(1-methyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)-4-propoxypiperidine, was achieved using accurate masses, isotope pattern matching, and in silico fragmentation in UNIFI’s Discovery Tool.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Minimal sample preparation with direct pyrolysis
- Soft ionization preserves molecular ions for elemental composition determination
- Statistical workflows facilitate rapid discrimination of material types
- In-house library expansion enables streamlined future screening
Future Trends and Applications
Advances may include integration of machine learning for automatic marker discovery, expanding spectral libraries for a broader range of polymers, and coupling with complementary techniques to enhance structural characterization. Regulatory demand for recycled plastic traceability will drive adoption of these hyphenated approaches.
Conclusion
The combined pyrolysis-APGC-HRMS and multivariate statistical strategy provides a robust, high-throughput method to characterize and distinguish virgin versus recycled industrial plastics, aiding quality control and supporting circular economy initiatives.
Reference
1. European Commission. A European Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy. 2018.
2. Tsuge S., Ohtani H., Watanabe C. Pyrolysis-GC/MS Data Book of Synthetic Polymers. 2011.
3. Plumb R., Johnson K., Rainville P., et al. UPLC/MSE: A New Approach for Generating Molecular Fragment Information for Biomarker Structure Elucidation. Rapid Commun. Mass Spectrom. 2006;20:1984–1994.
4. Stevens D., Cabovska B., Bailey A. Detection and Identification of Extractable Compounds from Polymers. Waters Application Note 720004211. 2012.
5. Riches E., Goshawk J., Da Costa J., Jones G. Discrimination Between Commercial Lubricant Oils Using Mass Spectrometry and Multivariate Analysis within UNIFI. Waters Application Note 720006406. 2018.
6. Schweighuber A., Gall M., Fisher J., et al. Development of an LC-MS Method for the Semiquantitative Determination of Polyamide 6 Contamination in Polyolefin Recyclates. Anal Bioanal Chem. 2021;413:1091–1098.
7. Cabovska B. Screening Workflow for Extractable Testing Using the UNIFI Scientific Information System. Technical Note 720005688. 2016.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
[ CASE STUDY ] A Consolidated Approach for Analytical Testing of Recycled Industrial Plastics Rachel Sanig1, James A. Browne1, Jennifer Gough1, Donald A. Trinite1, Ben MacCreath1, Falk-Thilo Ferse1, Agnieszka Kalinowska2 , Christoph Rethmann, 2 Pascal Tuszewski, 2 and Cristian I.…
Key words
recycled, recycledplastics, plasticsconsolidated, consolidatedregrind, regrindindustrial, industrialcase, caserecycling, recyclingstudy, studythyssenkrupp, thyssenkruppapproach, approachproperties, propertiestesting, testingapgc, apgcvirgin, virginanalytical
Pyrolysis-Gas Chromatography-High Resolution Mass Spectrometry with Soft Ionization for Increased Confidence of Polymer Characterization
2022|Waters|Applications
Application Note Pyrolysis-Gas Chromatography-High Resolution Mass Spectrometry with Soft Ionization for Increased Confidence of Polymer Characterization Rachel Sanig, Cristian Cojocariu, Rhys Jones Waters Corporation Abstract This application note highlights a comparison between classical pyrolysis-GC with EI-Tandem Quadrupole MS and pyrolysis-APGC…
Key words
pyrolysis, pyrolysissoft, softpolymer, polymercharacterization, characterizationconfidence, confidenceionization, ionizationincreased, increasedresolution, resolutionspectrometry, spectrometrymass, massgas, gaschromatography, chromatographyhigh, highapgc, apgcmse
Characterization of Plastics Using Mass Spectral Reference Libraries Developed From Pyrolysis-APGC-QToF MS
2023|Waters|Applications
Application Note Characterization of Plastics Using Mass Spectral Reference Libraries Developed From Pyrolysis-APGC-QToF MS Rachel Sanig, Rhys Jones, Cristian Cojocariu Waters Corporation This is an Application Brief and does not contain a detailed Experimental section. Abstract Due to the reproducible…
Key words
apgc, apgcqtof, qtofpyrolysis, pyrolysislibraries, librariesaveraged, averagedionization, ionizationlibrary, libraryfrom, fromspectrum, spectrumsoft, softmass, massbiobased, biobasedcreation, creationutilized, utilizedpyrolyzates
Extractables, Leachables, and Food Contact Materials
2018|Agilent Technologies|Guides
Extractables, Leachables, and Food Contact Materials Application Notebook Extractables, Leachables, and Food Contact Materials Testing The safety of pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and foodstuffs may be compromised by chemical compounds in the various types of packaging and food contact materials (FCMs) that…
Key words
packaging, packagingextractables, extractablesmigrants, migrantsunifi, unififood, foodleachables, leachablesuplc, uplcscreening, screeningelucidation, elucidationkitchenware, kitchenwareqtof, qtofmaterials, materialsnon, nonacquity, acquitynias