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Quantification of Low Levels of Methyl Methacrylate in a Copolymer

Applications |  | CDS AnalyticalInstrumentation
GC/MSD, Pyrolysis
Industries
Materials Testing
Manufacturer
CDS Analytical

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Quantifying trace levels of monomers in copolymer materials such as styrene-based rubbers and latex paints is crucial for ensuring product quality, performance and compliance with regulations.

Objectives and Overview of the Study


This study demonstrates the use of pyrolysis-GC/MS to detect and quantify low concentrations (0.1–0.4%) of methyl methacrylate (MMA) in styrene copolymers by monitoring characteristic pyrolysis products and employing an internal calibration strategy.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Samples containing known MMA concentrations were analyzed without weighing by establishing a peak area ratio calibration curve between MMA and toluene pyrolysis fragments.
Instrumentation parameters included pyrolysis at 750°C connected to a GC/MS system with a 5% phenyl column, helium carrier, split injection, and mass scanning from 35–600 amu.

Main Results and Discussion


Pyrograms reveal distinct peaks for styrene monomer, dimer and trimer, as well as a measurable MMA peak alongside other pyrolysis products like toluene and alpha-methyl styrene.
The ratio of the MMA peak area to the toluene peak area exhibited a strong linear correlation with MMA content, enabling accurate quantification independent of sample size.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The described approach allows rapid, reliable determination of trace monomer levels without precise sample weighing, offering valuable quality control for polymer manufacturers and contaminant screening in industrial materials.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Emerging developments may include coupling pyrolysis with time-of-flight MS for enhanced sensitivity, advanced chemometric analysis for multicomponent copolymer characterization, and extending the method to other trace monomers and additives.

Used Instrumentation


Pyroprobe with interface and valve oven at 325°C, pyrolysis at 750°C; GC/MS with 5% phenyl column (30m × 0.25mm), helium carrier (50:1 split), injector at 350°C, oven program from 40°C to 325°C at 10°C/min, mass range 35–600 amu.

Conclusion


Pyrolysis-GC/MS with an internal peak ratio calibration provides a robust, straightforward technique for quantifying low-level methyl methacrylate in styrene copolymers, enhancing quality assurance and contaminant detection in polymer applications.

References


F. Wang. Composition and Microstructure Determination of a Latex System by Pyrolysis Gas Chromatography. Analytical Chemistry. 71 (1999) 4776–4780.

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