Analysis of Waste Solvent by Purge and Trap
Applications | | CDS AnalyticalInstrumentation
Trace analysis of halogenated organics in waste cleaning solvents is crucial for environmental compliance and safe disposal. Accurate detection at low concentrations protects water resources and meets regulatory standards.
This study evaluates the effectiveness of purge and trap extraction from aqueous solutions to quantify residual halogenated solvents in an alcohol cleaning medium. A comparison with static headspace results highlights improvements in sensitivity and resolution.
A two-step approach was applied:
The static headspace method generated a dominant alcohol peak obscuring minor halogenated compounds. The purge and trap technique enhanced recovery of less water-soluble halogenated solvents by retaining most alcohol in the aqueous phase. Cryofocusing sharpened early eluting peaks, yielding clear separation and increased sensitivity for trace analytes.
Advances may include integration with mass spectrometric detection for compound identification, automated sample handling for high throughput, and development of novel sorbents to target a broader range of analytes. Miniaturized purge and trap systems could enable field-deployable monitoring.
Purge and trap extraction from aqueous media combined with cryofocusing on Tenax significantly outperforms static headspace for trace analysis of halogenated solvents in alcohol cleaning wastes. The method offers sharp peak resolution and improved sensitivity essential for environmental and industrial quality assurance.
GC, Purge and Trap
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerCDS Analytical
Summary
Significance of the topic
Trace analysis of halogenated organics in waste cleaning solvents is crucial for environmental compliance and safe disposal. Accurate detection at low concentrations protects water resources and meets regulatory standards.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates the effectiveness of purge and trap extraction from aqueous solutions to quantify residual halogenated solvents in an alcohol cleaning medium. A comparison with static headspace results highlights improvements in sensitivity and resolution.
Methodology and Instrumentation
A two-step approach was applied:
- Static headspace analysis: 10 mL sample heated at 70 °C for 30 min; 4 mL headspace injected into GC.
- Purge and trap from water: 4 mL alcohol diluted in 5 mL water; purged with helium at 30 mL/min for 10 min; organics trapped on Tenax; backflushed and cryofocused at –100 °C before GC injection.
Used Instrumentation
- Sample concentrator with Tenax trap and cryofocusing capability
- Gas chromatograph with flame ionization detector
- Column: 50 m × 0.25 mm SE-54
- Transfer line and valve oven maintained at 250 °C
Main Results and Discussion
The static headspace method generated a dominant alcohol peak obscuring minor halogenated compounds. The purge and trap technique enhanced recovery of less water-soluble halogenated solvents by retaining most alcohol in the aqueous phase. Cryofocusing sharpened early eluting peaks, yielding clear separation and increased sensitivity for trace analytes.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Improved detection limits for halogenated contaminants in waste solvents
- Enhanced chromatographic resolution of volatile compounds
- Applicability to various matrices including water, soils, and industrial waste streams
- Supports regulatory compliance and quality control in manufacturing and environmental monitoring
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advances may include integration with mass spectrometric detection for compound identification, automated sample handling for high throughput, and development of novel sorbents to target a broader range of analytes. Miniaturized purge and trap systems could enable field-deployable monitoring.
Conclusion
Purge and trap extraction from aqueous media combined with cryofocusing on Tenax significantly outperforms static headspace for trace analysis of halogenated solvents in alcohol cleaning wastes. The method offers sharp peak resolution and improved sensitivity essential for environmental and industrial quality assurance.
References
- Bellar T and Lichtenberg J L, J. Am. Water Works Assn. 66(12): 739.
- Wampler T, Bowe W, Higgins J and Levy E, Systems Approach to Automatic Cryofocusing in Purge and Trap, Head-space and Pyrolytic Analyses, Am. Lab. 17(8): 82, 1985.
- Grote J, Apparatus for Concentration of Volatile Organic Pollutants in Water, Am. Lab. 7(2): 47, 1975.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Analysis of Waste Solvent by Purge & Trap
|CDS Analytical|Applications
JSB is an authorised partner of #003 Analysis of Waste Solvent by Purge & Trap The purge and trap technique was originally developed for the analysis of organic volatiles…
Key words
cryofocusing, cryofocusingpurge, purgetrap, trapjsb, jsbalcohol, alcoholonto, ontoliqfor, liqforstream, streamheadspace, headspacegas, gasobscured, obscuredrefocused, refocusedpermitting, permittingeindhoven, eindhovenzoex
Dynamic Headspace Analysis of Food Volatiles Coffee and Tea
|CDS Analytical|Applications
#12a Dynamic Headspace Analysis of Food Volatiles Coffee and Tea Application Note Food & Flavor Author: T. Wampler Because the aroma and flavor of foods are due largely to volatile organic compounds, headspace analysis is very popular in food research…
Key words
chromatograms, chromatogramscompounds, compoundsfood, foodheadspace, headspacerefocused, refocuseddynamic, dynamicswept, sweptaccompanying, accompanyingconstantly, constantlytenax, tenaxcoffee, coffeeorganics, organicsconcentrator, concentratoritself, itselftea
Dynamic Headspace of Citrus Peels
|CDS Analytical|Applications
Dynamic Headspace of Citrus Peels Application Note Food and Flavor Author: T. Wampler Headspace sampling of volatiles from food samples is a convenient way of introducing aroma constituents into a gas chromatograph. Traditional or “static” headspace techniques involve placing the…
Key words
peels, peelscryogenic, cryogenicrefocusing, refocusingbackflushed, backflushedpyroprobe, pyroprobecitrus, citrustenax, tenaxlimonene, limonenetrapped, trappedflavor, flavorespecially, especiallyheated, heatedambient, ambienttemp, tempheadspace
Dynamic Headspace- Glass vs Metal
|CDS Analytical|Applications
#1a Dynamic Headspace- Glass vs Metal Application Note The advent of adsorptive sample concentrating techniques has greatly simplified many chromatographic analyses. Originally applied to the analysis of volatile pollutants in drinking water, the concept has been extended to a variety…
Key words
techniques, techniquescially, ciallycompounds, compoundscryogenically, cryogenicallymetal, metalrefocused, refocuseddestroyed, destroyedadvent, adventadsorptive, adsorptiveoctanol, octanolhexanoate, hexanoatebackflushed, backflushedhexadecane, hexadecaneconcentrating, concentratingdecane