Characterization of Polymer Carbon Sieves, Graphitized Polymer Carbons and Graphitized Carbon Blacks for Sample Preparation Applications

Presentations | 2010 | MerckInstrumentation
Sample Preparation
Industries
Materials Testing
Manufacturer
Merck

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Activated and graphitized carbons have long been central to sample preparation methods such as solid phase extraction and air sampling. Recent advances in material purity, pore architecture and particle control enable ultra-trace capture of volatile, semi-volatile and polar analytes. Coatings based on these carbons on diverse substrates open new avenues in environmental monitoring, bioanalysis and defense applications.

Study Objectives and Overview


This work examines three specialty carbon materials—a 2 μm carbon molecular sieve (CMS), a 2 μm graphitized polymer carbon (GPC) and a 175 nm graphitized carbon black (GCB)—for their suitability as coated adsorbent surfaces. The goal was to characterize their textural features, evaluate adsorption capacity and demonstrate coating strategies for gas- and liquid-phase sample preparation.

Methodology and Instrumentation


The materials were synthesized by:
  • Suspension polymerization and ion-exchange pyrolysis to produce spherical, microporous CMS.
  • Polymer templating with macropore formation, ion-exchange and high-temperature graphitization for GPC.
  • Direct graphitization of carbon black precursors above 2500 °C to yield 175 nm GCB.
Their properties were characterized using:
  • Nitrogen adsorption porosimetry (BET surface area, pore size distribution).
  • Helium pycnometry (true density).
  • Inverse gas chromatography for initial retention testing.
  • Gas chromatographic breakthrough volume measurements for key volatile targets.
  • Light microscopy and TEM to evaluate coating thickness and particle morphology.

Main Results and Discussion


Textural data reveal distinct porosity profiles:
  • CMS: 418 m²/g, 0.221 cc/g total pore volume, average pore diameter ~11 Å, particle size ~2 μm.
  • GPC: 126 m²/g, 0.542 cc/g total pore volume, average pore diameter ~173 Å, particle size ~2 μm.
  • GCB: 202 m²/g, 0.458 cc/g total pore volume, average pore diameter ~90 Å, particle size ~0.175 μm.
IGC and breakthrough tests demonstrate high retention capacities across a range of analytes. For example, chloromethane achieved a breakthrough volume of 47 L on CMS, while toluene showed retention volumes exceeding 16 × 10⁶ mL. Light microscope images confirm uniform coatings (≈30 μm) on wire mesh substrates. TEM images of GCB illustrate aggregated graphitic domains with high conductivity (10²–10⁴ S/m).

Benefits and Practical Applications


These carbon materials offer:
  • High surface areas and tailored pore sizes for selective adsorption of volatile and semi-volatile compounds.
  • Robust adhesion to glass, metal and polymer substrates via proprietary adhesives.
  • Compatibility with micro-SPE, SPME tips and coated sampling media for enhanced sensitivity.
  • Reversible adsorption and desorption for efficient analyte recovery.

Future Trends and Applications


Emerging directions include:
  • Functionalization of carbon surfaces with specific chemical groups to target new compound classes.
  • Further miniaturization for high-throughput and inline sampling in flow systems.
  • Integration with microfluidic devices and on-chip analysis platforms.
  • Development of regenerable and green carbon adsorbents for sustainable workflows.

Conclusion


The newly developed CMS, GPC and GCB materials exhibit optimized textural and performance characteristics for both gas-phase and liquid-phase sample preparation. Their high capacities, controlled porosity and effective coating strategies support sensitive, reproducible trace analyte analysis in environmental, biological and defense contexts.

References


  • Betz W. and Desorcie J., Nucleophilic Bodies Bonded to Siloxane and Use Thereof for Separations from Sample Matrices, US Patents US05599445, US05607580, US05609756, US05620603, US05630937.
  • Webb P.A. and Orr C., Analytical Methods in Fine Particle Technology, Micromeritics, Norcross, GA, 1997.
  • Kiselev A.V. and Yashin Y.A., Gas Adsorption Chromatography, Plenum Press, New York, 1969.

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