COUNTING DOUBLE BONDS: GC×GC–FID FOR PLASTIC PYROLYSIS OILS

Presentations | 2026 | C³AL | MDCWInstrumentation
GCxGC
Industries
Environmental, Energy & Chemicals
Manufacturer
LECO

Summary

Importance of the Topic


The conversion of plastic waste into fuels by pyrolysis is a promising approach to reduce plastic pollution and recover energy.
Olefin content strongly influences fuel stability and combustion properties, making precise quantification essential for industrial and environmental applications.

Study Objectives and Overview


This study reviews analytical strategies for detailed olefin quantification in complex plastic pyrolysis oils.
Key goals include comparing titration, spectroscopic, chromatographic and selective methods, and developing improved quantification workflows leveraging GC×GC–FID and selective adsorption.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Multiple approaches were evaluated:
  • Titration methods (bromine number, iodine value)
  • Spectroscopy (FTIR, Raman, NMR)
  • Chromatography: one-dimensional GC, GC–VUV, HPLC, SFC
  • Comprehensive two-dimensional GC coupled with FID, TOFMS and HRMS
  • Selective adsorption using Ag-SiO2 SPE cartridges
  • Derivatization of olefins using disulfides (DMDS, DBuDS, Ph2S2, DBzDS, di-tert-dodecyl disulfide)

Instrument resolution and selectivity were enhanced by optimized sample preparation, selective adsorption and chemical derivatization steps.

Main Results and Discussion


GC×GC–FID provided unparalleled resolution of paraffins, olefins, cycloparaffins and aromatics across wide boiling ranges.
Selective adsorption on Ag-SiO2 effectively removed olefins from sample matrices, allowing accurate discrimination of n-alkanes and isoalkanes.
Disulfide derivatization at 70 °C for 24 h with DMDS achieved complete aliphatic olefin conversion in gasoline-range samples, confirmed by 1H-NMR.
Heavier disulfides and optimized reaction conditions are required for diesel and jet-range olefins to ensure full derivatization and clear chromatographic separation.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Accurate, reproducible olefin quantification supports quality assurance and process control in plastic-to-fuel operations.
  • SPE with Ag-SiO2 is cost-effective and adaptable to routine laboratory workflows.
  • GC×GC–FID combined with selective sample preparation enables detailed compositional profiling of complex pyrolysis oils.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Innovations include photoinitiator alternatives to iodine, novel disulfide reagents, room-temperature derivatization protocols and integration with advanced mass spectrometry and data analytics.
Machine learning and chemometric methods may further improve peak deconvolution and quantitation accuracy in complex samples.

Conclusion


An integrated analytical strategy combining GC×GC–FID, selective adsorption and chemical derivatization validated by NMR provides accurate olefin quantification in plastic pyrolysis oils.
Ongoing method refinements will extend applicability to heavier fuel fractions and enhance throughput for industrial adoption.

References


  • Auersvald M., Barzallo G., Gieng H., Patel J., Sharma A., Van Geem K. M., Straka P., Vozka P. Toward Accurate Olefin Quantification in Plastic Waste Oils: Analytical Strategies and Future Directions. Trends in Analytical Chemistry 2025.
  • Auersvald M., Šiman M., Vozka P., Straka P. Quantitative Determination of Olefins in Pyrolysis Oils from Waste Plastics and Tires Using Selective Adsorption by Ag-SiO2 Followed by GC×GC–FID. Talanta 2025, 281, 126792.
  • Barzallo G., Gieng H., Sharma A., Patel J., Auersvald M., Straka P., Vozka P. Quantitative Analysis of Aliphatic Olefins in Alternative Fuels Made from the Conversion of Plastic Waste via GC×GC–FID. Journal of Chromatography A, in preparation.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Alkene Quantitation in Plastic Waste-Derived Alternative Fuels using GC×GC FID
15th Multidimensional Chromatography Workshop Alkene Quantitation in Plastic Waste-Derived Alternative Fuels using GC×GC FID Genesis Barzallo, Hung Gieng, Petr Vozka Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, California State University, Los Angeles [email protected] Background • California landfills enough plastic each day to…
Key words
alphaterpinene, alphaterpineneciscyclooctene, ciscyclooctenecyclododecatriene, cyclododecatrienecyclododecene, cyclododecenecycloheptene, cycloheptenecyclohexene, cyclohexenecompounds, compoundsolefins, olefinsalkenes, alkenesmonocycloalkanes, monocycloalkanesfoil, foiliso, isomodel, modelalkanes, alkanesastm
Quantitative Analysis of Olefins in Alternative Fuels Made From Conversion of Plastic Waste via GC×GC-FID
31st Annual Student Symposium on Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activities Quantitative Analysis of Olefins in Alternative Fuels Made From Conversion of Plastic Waste via GC×GC-FID Presenter: Genesis Barzallo M.S. Chemistry Faculty Advisor: Dr. Petr Vozka PLASTIC WASTE IN LANDFILLS •…
Key words
foil, foilalkenes, alkenesastm, astmfeed, feedvalidation, validationalkanes, alkaneslike, likeiso, isoolefins, olefinscompared, comparedmonocycloalkanes, monocycloalkanesplastic, plasticwaste, wastemethods, methodsother
Quantitative Analysis of Aliphatic Olefins in Fuels made from Plastic Waste by Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography
Quantitative Analysis of Aliphatic Olefins in Fuels made from Plastic Waste by Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography Petr Vozka, Ph.D. Assistant Professor Chemistry & Biochemistry California State University, Los Angeles January 30, 2023 Overview Comprehensive Two-Dimensional Gas Chromatography (GC×GC) Quantitative Analysis…
Key words
alkenes, alkenesfoil, foilplastic, plasticwaste, wasteolefins, olefinsiso, isoalkanes, alkanesdiesel, dieselfuels, fuelsquadjet, quadjetaromatics, aromaticsmodulation, modulationisoalkenes, isoalkenesoceans, oceanstires
Quantitative determination of olefins in pyrolysis oils from waste plastics and tires using selective adsorption by Ag–SiO2 followed by GC×GC-FID
Talanta 281 (2025) 126792 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Talanta journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/talanta Quantitative determination of olefins in pyrolysis oils from waste plastics and tires using selective adsorption by Ag–SiO2 followed by GC×GC-FID Miloš Auersvald a,** , Michal Šiman a…
Key words
olefins, olefinspyrolysis, pyrolysisoils, oilsplastics, plasticsolefin, olefintires, tiresstyrenes, styrenesaliphatic, aliphaticwaste, wastecontent, contentadsorption, adsorptionoil, oilelution, elutionfrom, fromsaturated
Other projects
LCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
FacebookX (Twitter)LinkedInYouTube
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike