Analysis of Brominated Flame Retardants and Phthalate Esters In Polymers Under the Same Conditions Using a Pyrolysis GC-MS System (1) − PBBs and PBDEs −
Applications | 2012 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
Modern polymer materials often incorporate brominated flame retardants and phthalate esters to meet stringent fire safety and regulatory requirements. Simultaneous, reliable analysis of these additives is crucial for quality control, environmental monitoring, and compliance with directives such as RoHS and REACH. A unified analytical protocol reduces turnaround time and ensures consistent detection of diverse compounds in complex polymer matrices.
This study aimed to develop and validate a single-method approach for the determination of polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDD), bis(pentabromophenyl)ethane (BB), and several phthalate esters in polyethylene and polypropylene samples. By leveraging a multi-shot pyrolyzer coupled to a GC-MS system, the method seeks to streamline sample preparation and analysis under identical thermal and chromatographic conditions.
Samples: Certified reference polymers ERM®-EC590 (PE) and ERM®-EC591 (PP) spiked with target analytes.
Sample prep: 0.5 mg polymer shavings directly introduced into pyrolyzer.
The total ion current (TIC) and SIM chromatograms demonstrated clear separation of congeners in both PE and PP matrices. Tetra- to hepta-BDEs eluted between 2.5 and 8 min, while higher brominated compounds (octa- through deca-BDEs and BB-209) appeared from 9 to 16 min. Distinct SIM peaks confirmed identification of TBBPA and HBCDD alongside phthalate esters such as DIBP, BBP, DEHP, DOP, DINP, and DIDP. Sensitivity and selectivity were sufficient to quantify each analyte at trace levels without interferences.
This unified pyrolysis GC-MS protocol offers:
Advances may include integration of high-resolution mass spectrometry for improved isomer discrimination, automated data-processing workflows enhanced by machine learning, and expansion of target lists to novel halogenated compounds. Miniaturized pyrolyzers and ambient ionization techniques may further speed analysis, while real-time monitoring could support on-line process control in polymer manufacturing.
The presented method successfully achieves simultaneous determination of brominated flame retardants and phthalate esters in polymer matrices under a single set of pyrolysis GC-MS conditions. Its robustness, speed, and broad analyte scope make it well suited for regulatory testing, quality assurance, and environmental analysis.
Shimadzu Corporation. Analysis of Brominated Flame Retardants and Phthalate Esters in Polymers Under the Same Conditions Using a Pyrolysis GC-MS System, First Edition, June 2012.
GC/MSD, Pyrolysis, GC/SQ
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerShimadzu, Frontier Lab
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Modern polymer materials often incorporate brominated flame retardants and phthalate esters to meet stringent fire safety and regulatory requirements. Simultaneous, reliable analysis of these additives is crucial for quality control, environmental monitoring, and compliance with directives such as RoHS and REACH. A unified analytical protocol reduces turnaround time and ensures consistent detection of diverse compounds in complex polymer matrices.
Objectives and Overview
This study aimed to develop and validate a single-method approach for the determination of polybrominated biphenyls (PBBs), polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), hexabromocyclododecane (HBCDD), bis(pentabromophenyl)ethane (BB), and several phthalate esters in polyethylene and polypropylene samples. By leveraging a multi-shot pyrolyzer coupled to a GC-MS system, the method seeks to streamline sample preparation and analysis under identical thermal and chromatographic conditions.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
Samples: Certified reference polymers ERM®-EC590 (PE) and ERM®-EC591 (PP) spiked with target analytes.
Sample prep: 0.5 mg polymer shavings directly introduced into pyrolyzer.
- Pyrolyzer: EGA/PY-3030D Multi-Shot Pyrolyzer; temperature ramp from 200 °C to 300 °C at 20 °C/min, then to 340 °C at 5 °C/min (1 min hold).
- GC-MS: Shimadzu GCMS-QP2010 Ultra with Ultra ALLOY-PBDE column (15 m × 0.25 mm I.D., 0.05 µm film).
- GC parameters: Split mode (ratio 50:1), injection/interface at 320 °C, oven ramp 80 °C to 300 °C at 20 °C/min (5 min hold), He carrier gas with constant linear velocity (52.1 cm/s).
- MS detection: Fast Automated Scan/SIM (FASST) mode combining full scan (m/z 50–1000) and targeted SIM events. Two SIM groups monitored key ions for tetra- through deca-BDEs, TBBPA, HBCDD, BB, and six phthalates.
Main Results and Discussion
The total ion current (TIC) and SIM chromatograms demonstrated clear separation of congeners in both PE and PP matrices. Tetra- to hepta-BDEs eluted between 2.5 and 8 min, while higher brominated compounds (octa- through deca-BDEs and BB-209) appeared from 9 to 16 min. Distinct SIM peaks confirmed identification of TBBPA and HBCDD alongside phthalate esters such as DIBP, BBP, DEHP, DOP, DINP, and DIDP. Sensitivity and selectivity were sufficient to quantify each analyte at trace levels without interferences.
Benefits and Practical Applications
This unified pyrolysis GC-MS protocol offers:
- Minimal sample preparation, reducing analysis time and risk of contamination.
- Comprehensive coverage of regulated and emerging flame retardants plus common plasticizers.
- High throughput for routine QA/QC and regulatory compliance testing.
- Applicability to environmental screening of polymer waste or recycled materials.
Future Trends and Possibilities
Advances may include integration of high-resolution mass spectrometry for improved isomer discrimination, automated data-processing workflows enhanced by machine learning, and expansion of target lists to novel halogenated compounds. Miniaturized pyrolyzers and ambient ionization techniques may further speed analysis, while real-time monitoring could support on-line process control in polymer manufacturing.
Conclusion
The presented method successfully achieves simultaneous determination of brominated flame retardants and phthalate esters in polymer matrices under a single set of pyrolysis GC-MS conditions. Its robustness, speed, and broad analyte scope make it well suited for regulatory testing, quality assurance, and environmental analysis.
References
Shimadzu Corporation. Analysis of Brominated Flame Retardants and Phthalate Esters in Polymers Under the Same Conditions Using a Pyrolysis GC-MS System, First Edition, June 2012.
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