The Thermal Desorption / Pyrolysis of Glass Fibre Air Filters
Applications | | GL SciencesInstrumentation
The thermal desorption and pyrolysis of glass fibre air filters enables direct analysis of organic contaminants absorbed on sampling media. This approach streamlines sample preparation, reduces solvent use and increases throughput in environmental monitoring and material characterization.
This application note evaluates a two-step thermal desorption and in-injector pyrolysis protocol for borosilicate glass filters impregnated with phenolic, epoxy resins and fluorocarbons. The goals are to demonstrate automation on a CombiPAL/LINEX system and to compare compound release profiles at 200 °C versus pyrolysis at 600 °C.
The procedure places 2–4 mg filter fragments in a fritted liner within a programmable injector. Under static flow, volatile and semi-volatile analytes are first desorbed at 200 °C, trapped on a CO₂ cryotrap, then transferred to an HP5-MS GC column for MS detection. After the desorption run, the injector is heated to 600 °C to pyrolyse the residual polymer matrix, producing characteristic high-mass fragments.
Thermal desorption at 200 °C yields discrete chromatographic peaks corresponding to residual resin monomers and fluorocarbon additives. Pyrolysis at 600 °C generates broad, high-mass fragment clusters reflecting polymer backbone breakdown. Multiple filter samples (A, B, D, H, L) show consistent trends: desorption profiles highlight low-molecular weight components, while pyrolysis reveals complex resin fragment distributions. Comparative abundance traces indicate higher signal intensities during pyrolysis.
Advances may include coupling with high-resolution MS for exact mass identification of pyrolysates, integration of two-dimensional GC for enhanced separation, and application to a broader range of sampling media. Machine learning algorithms could further interpret complex chromatographic patterns.
This study demonstrates a robust, automated approach for combined thermal desorption and in-injector pyrolysis of glass fibre filters. The method offers a comprehensive profile of volatiles and polymer fragments, supporting environmental monitoring and material characterization.
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, Pyrolysis, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, GL Sciences
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The thermal desorption and pyrolysis of glass fibre air filters enables direct analysis of organic contaminants absorbed on sampling media. This approach streamlines sample preparation, reduces solvent use and increases throughput in environmental monitoring and material characterization.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note evaluates a two-step thermal desorption and in-injector pyrolysis protocol for borosilicate glass filters impregnated with phenolic, epoxy resins and fluorocarbons. The goals are to demonstrate automation on a CombiPAL/LINEX system and to compare compound release profiles at 200 °C versus pyrolysis at 600 °C.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The procedure places 2–4 mg filter fragments in a fritted liner within a programmable injector. Under static flow, volatile and semi-volatile analytes are first desorbed at 200 °C, trapped on a CO₂ cryotrap, then transferred to an HP5-MS GC column for MS detection. After the desorption run, the injector is heated to 600 °C to pyrolyse the residual polymer matrix, producing characteristic high-mass fragments.
Instrumentation
- ATAS GL Optic 2-200 programmable injector
- Agilent 5890 GC with 5971 mass selective detector
- SGE CO₂ cryotrap
Main Results and Discussion
Thermal desorption at 200 °C yields discrete chromatographic peaks corresponding to residual resin monomers and fluorocarbon additives. Pyrolysis at 600 °C generates broad, high-mass fragment clusters reflecting polymer backbone breakdown. Multiple filter samples (A, B, D, H, L) show consistent trends: desorption profiles highlight low-molecular weight components, while pyrolysis reveals complex resin fragment distributions. Comparative abundance traces indicate higher signal intensities during pyrolysis.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Minimal sample handling and solvent-free extraction
- Rapid screening of filter-bound contaminants
- Automated workflow integration for routine QA/QC
- Detailed polymer decomposition analysis for material research
Future Trends and Possibilities
Advances may include coupling with high-resolution MS for exact mass identification of pyrolysates, integration of two-dimensional GC for enhanced separation, and application to a broader range of sampling media. Machine learning algorithms could further interpret complex chromatographic patterns.
Conclusion
This study demonstrates a robust, automated approach for combined thermal desorption and in-injector pyrolysis of glass fibre filters. The method offers a comprehensive profile of volatiles and polymer fragments, supporting environmental monitoring and material characterization.
Reference
- Nicholas D. Application Note No. 078: Thermal Desorption / Pyrolysis of Glass Fibre Air Filters. ATAS GL International B.V.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
The Thermal Desorption of Chocolate Flavoured Powder using Difficult Matrix Introduction (DMI)
|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note No. 079 The Thermal Desorption of Chocolate Flavoured Powder using Difficult Matrix Introduction (DMI) Diane Nicholas. Direct desorption of analytes from sample matrix to column Eliminates the need for sample preparation May be automated using…
Key words
cryotrap, cryotrapswept, sweptturned, turnedatasgl, atasglanalytes, analytesdesorption, desorptiondtd, dtdflavoured, flavoureddmi, dmifirstly, firstlyfritted, frittedchocolate, chocolatedesorbed, desorbedmatrix, matrixtrapped
VDA 278 Analysis Using Thermal Desorption
|CDS Analytical|Applications
#97a VDA 278 Analysis Using Thermal Desorption Application Note Automotive Author: C. Zawodny The German Automobile Association method VDA 278 is a thermal desorption analysis for organic emissions from interior components of a vehicle. This analysis deals with a VOC…
Key words
voc, vocfog, fogtra, tration, tionabundance, abundancetub, tubcarpetfibers, carpetfibersfogstd, fogstdiniti, initivalv, valvtda, tdafibers, fibersfigure, figurelong, longcarpet
Design, Performance and Applicability of a Multi-Functional Thermodesorption System for Trace Analysis in Capillary GC
1994|Agilent Technologies|Applications
AppNote 1/1994 Design, Performance and Applicability of a Multi-Functional Thermodesorption System for Trace Analysis in Capillary GC Andreas Hoffmann, Ralf Bremer Gerstel GmbH & Co.KG, Eberhard-Gerstel-Platz 1, D-45473 Mülheim an der Ruhr, Germany KEYWORDS Direct Thermal Desorption, Volatiles in Solids…
Key words
abundance, abundancethermodesorption, thermodesorptionlinalool, linaloolcis, cisdesorption, desorptiongerstel, gersteltime, timelimonene, limonenedihydro, dihydrothermal, thermaltds, tdstrapped, trappedpreliminary, preliminarygalaxoide, galaxoideveridoflorol
Thermal Sampling of Lubricants
|Agilent Technologies|Applications
#69 olutions APPLICATIONS INFORMATION USING ADVANCED SAMPLE HANDLING TECHNOLOGY Thermal Sampling of Lubricants Engine lubricants are prepared using a base oil (either natural or synthetic) with which a wide variety of additives can be mixed. Additive selectivity is dependent upon…
Key words
lubricants, lubricantsengine, engineime, imethermal, thermalsalicylate, salicylatelubricating, lubricatingolutions, olutionssampling, samplingaccumulate, accumulatepermit, permitapplications, applicationsemploys, employsrecommend, recommendfuels, fuelsphenol