Characterization of paint from artwork with automated THM pyrolysis and OPTIC Injector
Applications | | GL SciencesInstrumentation
Thermally assisted hydrolysis and methylation (THM) combined with GC-MS provides a powerful approach for characterizing complex organic materials in artwork. By converting polar macromolecules into volatile methylated fragments, THM-GC allows identification of binders, resins and coatings with minimal sample consumption and high reproducibility.
The primary goal was to evaluate automated THM inside an OPTIC injector for quantitative analysis of a complex paint model. A Round-Robin sample composed of dried linseed oil with ultramarine blue, Paraloid B82, sandarac, succinic acid, mastic, gum arabic and egg white was investigated to demonstrate method performance.
The sample was finely crushed, treated with 2 µl of tetramethylammonium hydroxide in methanol and introduced into a fritted liner within the OPTIC 3 Multi Mode Inlet operating in pyrolysis mode. Key instrumentation and conditions:
All constituents of the model paint were identified: methyl methacrylate and ethyl acrylate from Paraloid B82; glycerol, fatty acids and di-acids from linseed oil; dimethyl succinate as amber marker; hydroxylated sandaracopimaric acid derivative for sandarac; and various triterpenoid markers for mastic. Ten replicate analyses yielded peak area RSDs between 2.1 % and 8.9 %, demonstrating excellent repeatability.
Advances may include coupling THM-GC with high-resolution mass spectrometry for untargeted screening, expansion of spectral libraries for heritage materials, and integration of chemometric tools to enhance interpretation of complex chromatograms.
Automated THM within the OPTIC injector delivers fast, reliable and quantitative characterization of complex paint samples, enabling detailed identification of binders and additives with high reproducibility.
Erwin Kaal and Geert Alkema, Application Note No. 108, GL Sciences, March 2009.
GC/MSD, Pyrolysis, GC/SQ
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerShimadzu, GL Sciences
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Thermally assisted hydrolysis and methylation (THM) combined with GC-MS provides a powerful approach for characterizing complex organic materials in artwork. By converting polar macromolecules into volatile methylated fragments, THM-GC allows identification of binders, resins and coatings with minimal sample consumption and high reproducibility.
Objectives and Study Overview
The primary goal was to evaluate automated THM inside an OPTIC injector for quantitative analysis of a complex paint model. A Round-Robin sample composed of dried linseed oil with ultramarine blue, Paraloid B82, sandarac, succinic acid, mastic, gum arabic and egg white was investigated to demonstrate method performance.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The sample was finely crushed, treated with 2 µl of tetramethylammonium hydroxide in methanol and introduced into a fritted liner within the OPTIC 3 Multi Mode Inlet operating in pyrolysis mode. Key instrumentation and conditions:
- Autosampler: CombiPAL Robotic Sample Processor
- GC-MS: Shimadzu 2010
- Column: TC-5 MS, 30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm
- Oven program: 40 °C (4 min); 7 °C/min to 240 °C; 10 °C/min to 320 °C (5 min)
- Hydrolysis: 100 °C ramped at 10 °C/s, 120 s
- Pyrolysis/methylation: 550 °C ramped at 30 °C/s
Main Results and Discussion
All constituents of the model paint were identified: methyl methacrylate and ethyl acrylate from Paraloid B82; glycerol, fatty acids and di-acids from linseed oil; dimethyl succinate as amber marker; hydroxylated sandaracopimaric acid derivative for sandarac; and various triterpenoid markers for mastic. Ten replicate analyses yielded peak area RSDs between 2.1 % and 8.9 %, demonstrating excellent repeatability.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Quantitative and reproducible analysis of natural and synthetic binders
- Minimal sample preparation and consumption
- Rapid, automated workflow suitable for cultural heritage laboratories
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advances may include coupling THM-GC with high-resolution mass spectrometry for untargeted screening, expansion of spectral libraries for heritage materials, and integration of chemometric tools to enhance interpretation of complex chromatograms.
Conclusion
Automated THM within the OPTIC injector delivers fast, reliable and quantitative characterization of complex paint samples, enabling detailed identification of binders and additives with high reproducibility.
References
Erwin Kaal and Geert Alkema, Application Note No. 108, GL Sciences, March 2009.
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