Fast Analysis of Chlorinated Priority Pollutants using Large Volume Injection
Applications | | GL SciencesInstrumentation
Chlorinated priority pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dioxins and similar compounds pose serious health risks due to their carcinogenic and persistent nature. Accurate environmental monitoring demands analytical methods with exceptionally low detection limits and high sample throughput.
The main goal was to develop a rapid, sensitive workflow combining large volume injection (LVI) with high-speed gas chromatography and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. By integrating the ATAS Optic 2 injector in LVI mode and the Pegasus II TOF-MS detector, the study aimed to accelerate routine PCB and dioxin analyses while preserving analytical performance.
The existing 50-minute GC method was miniaturized into an 11-minute protocol (13 minutes for a 50 µL injection). Key parameters included:
Deconvolution software was applied to resolve coeluting congeners and generate clean spectra for library matching.
The fast GC method reduced run times from 50 to 11–13 minutes without compromising sensitivity for 28 PCB congeners. Comparison of 10 µL versus 50 µL injections showed enhanced signal intensity at higher volumes. TOF-MS deconvolution successfully separated overlapping peaks, enabling reliable identification even below baseline levels. Analysis of a real municipal waste combustion dust extract revealed more than 280 compounds (PAHs, dioxins, dibenzofurans), with characteristic mass traces of hexachloro, heptachloro, and octachloro compounds identified via library search.
Further performance gains are expected by optimizing scan rates, expanding injection volumes and refining data processing algorithms. The approach could evolve toward on-site or near real-time monitoring, integration with automated sample preparation, and broader compound libraries for hazardous pollutant screening.
The combined LVI-GC-TOF-MS platform delivers a rapid, robust and sensitive solution for analyzing chlorinated priority pollutants in complex samples. Its flexibility and high throughput make it a valuable tool for environmental and industrial laboratories.
Application Note No. 067 Fast Analysis of Chlorinated Priority Pollutants using Large Volume Injection by Roman Hirsch, LECO Instrumente GmbH
GC/MSD, GC/TOF
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerGL Sciences, LECO
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Chlorinated priority pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dioxins and similar compounds pose serious health risks due to their carcinogenic and persistent nature. Accurate environmental monitoring demands analytical methods with exceptionally low detection limits and high sample throughput.
Study Objectives and Overview
The main goal was to develop a rapid, sensitive workflow combining large volume injection (LVI) with high-speed gas chromatography and time-of-flight mass spectrometry. By integrating the ATAS Optic 2 injector in LVI mode and the Pegasus II TOF-MS detector, the study aimed to accelerate routine PCB and dioxin analyses while preserving analytical performance.
Methodology
The existing 50-minute GC method was miniaturized into an 11-minute protocol (13 minutes for a 50 µL injection). Key parameters included:
- Injection volumes: 10 µL and 50 µL with automated venting and split control
- Oven program: initial hold at 40 °C, 16 °C/min to 315 °C
- Column: Restek XTI-5, 20 m × 0.18 mm × 0.2 µm
- Carrier gas: helium at 1.0 mL/min
- MS scan range: 50–520 amu at 20 spectra/s, ion source at 170 °C
Deconvolution software was applied to resolve coeluting congeners and generate clean spectra for library matching.
Used Instrumentation
- ATAS Optic 2 large volume injection system
- Gas chromatograph equipped with Restek XTI-5 capillary column
- Pegasus II time-of-flight mass spectrometer
Main Results and Discussion
The fast GC method reduced run times from 50 to 11–13 minutes without compromising sensitivity for 28 PCB congeners. Comparison of 10 µL versus 50 µL injections showed enhanced signal intensity at higher volumes. TOF-MS deconvolution successfully separated overlapping peaks, enabling reliable identification even below baseline levels. Analysis of a real municipal waste combustion dust extract revealed more than 280 compounds (PAHs, dioxins, dibenzofurans), with characteristic mass traces of hexachloro, heptachloro, and octachloro compounds identified via library search.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High-throughput monitoring of PCBs and chlorinated dioxins
- Enhanced detection limits through large volume injection
- Automated deconvolution improves data clarity in complex matrices
- Applicable to environmental laboratories, industrial QA/QC and regulatory compliance
Future Trends and Applications
Further performance gains are expected by optimizing scan rates, expanding injection volumes and refining data processing algorithms. The approach could evolve toward on-site or near real-time monitoring, integration with automated sample preparation, and broader compound libraries for hazardous pollutant screening.
Conclusion
The combined LVI-GC-TOF-MS platform delivers a rapid, robust and sensitive solution for analyzing chlorinated priority pollutants in complex samples. Its flexibility and high throughput make it a valuable tool for environmental and industrial laboratories.
Reference
Application Note No. 067 Fast Analysis of Chlorinated Priority Pollutants using Large Volume Injection by Roman Hirsch, LECO Instrumente GmbH
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