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Automated SPE and Fast GC-ECD Analysis of PCBs in Waste Oil

Applications | 2008 | GERSTELInstrumentation
GC, Sample Preparation
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies, GERSTEL

Summary

Importance of the topic


Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are persistent environmental pollutants commonly found in waste oils. Rapid and reliable analysis is crucial for environmental monitoring, regulatory compliance, and industrial quality control. Traditional methods (e.g., DIN EN 61619) are labor-intensive and time-consuming, limiting sample throughput. Advances in automated sample preparation combined with fast gas chromatography-electron capture detection (GC-ECD) can significantly enhance analytical efficiency.

Objectives and study overview


This work aimed to develop a fully automated solid phase extraction (SPE) coupled with fast GC-ECD using a modular accelerated column heater (MACH) for the quantification of PCBs in waste oil. Key goals included reducing analysis time, maintaining high throughput (up to 100 samples/day), achieving a wide dynamic range (<1 ppb to >50 mg/mL), and ensuring good repeatability and recovery.

Methodology and instrumentation


Automated SPE was performed on a GERSTEL MPS 3 with integrated SPE option using 3 mL Macherey-Nagel SA/SiOH cartridges. A typical protocol:
  1. Condition cartridge with 1.5 mL hexane
  2. Load 250 µL waste oil sample
  3. Rinse cartridge with 0.5 mL hexane
  4. Elute PCBs with 2 × 2.5 mL hexane

Instrumental setup:
  • Gas chromatograph: Agilent 6890 with splitless injector at 300°C
  • Detector: Electron capture detector at 330°C
  • Column: 20 m × 180 µm I.D., 0.18 µm Rtx-PCB in MACH oven
  • Temperature program: 100°C (1 s) to 200°C at 100°C/min, then to 300°C at 10°C/min
  • Carrier gas: Hydrogen at 1.5 mL/min

Main results and discussion


The method achieved baseline separation of key PCB congeners within a 12-minute run. Recovery studies on a certified waste mineral oil standard (BCR-449) yielded recoveries between 85% and 95% for six monitored congeners, with repeatability (RSD) ranging from 2.7% to 5.0%. Analysis of a highly contaminated waste oil sample demonstrated capability across diverse concentration levels. Full automation enabled consistent sample processing and throughput of 100 samples per day.

Benefits and practical applications


  • Rapid analysis: total time <15 min versus ~40 min in standard methods
  • High throughput: ~100 samples/day with minimal manual intervention
  • Wide dynamic range: suitable from trace to high-level PCB detection
  • Improved laboratory efficiency: seamless integration of SPE and GC-ECD

Future trends and possibilities


Potential developments include coupling fast GC with mass spectrometric detection for enhanced selectivity, miniaturization of SPE formats to reduce solvent usage, and integration with real-time data processing and laboratory information management systems (LIMS) to streamline environmental monitoring and regulatory reporting.

Conclusion


Combining automated SPE with a MACH-accelerated GC-ECD system provides a robust, high-throughput method for PCB analysis in waste oil. The approach significantly reduces analysis time while maintaining accuracy and precision, offering a valuable tool for environmental laboratories and industrial quality control.

Reference


[1] Mustacich R., et al. US Patent 6,217,829; 6,209,386; 6,530,260.
[2] Hoffmann A., Tienpont B., David F., Sandra P. Gerstel Application Note 6/2006.
[3] David F., Szûcs R., Makwana J., Sandra P. Journal of Separation Science, 29 (2006) 695–698.
[4] Macherey-Nagel. Solid Phase Extraction Application Guide, Application No. 301390.

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