Room-temperature-ionic-liquid coated graphitized carbons for selective preconcentration of polar vapors

•With the RTIL, capacities for polar (e.g., organophosphorus) vapors increased ∼2.5 ×.•With the RTIL, capacities for non-polar vapors decreased 11–26×.•Trends in capacity were strongly correlated with analyte vapor pressure.•Trends in capacity were not well described by LSER models. Most adsorbent m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Chromatography A 2020-01, Vol.1609, p.460486, Article 460486
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Junqi, Ma, Jialiu, Zellers, Edward T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•With the RTIL, capacities for polar (e.g., organophosphorus) vapors increased ∼2.5 ×.•With the RTIL, capacities for non-polar vapors decreased 11–26×.•Trends in capacity were strongly correlated with analyte vapor pressure.•Trends in capacity were not well described by LSER models. Most adsorbent materials used for preconcentrating and thermally desorbing volatile and semi-volatile organic compounds (S/VOCs) in portable or “micro” gas chromatographic (GC/µGC) instruments preferentially capture non-polar or moderately polar compounds relative to more polar compounds. Here, we explore the use of a known trigonal–tripyramidal room-temperature ionic liquid (RTIL) as a surface modifier for the graphitized carbons, Carbopack B (C-B) and Carbopack X (C-X), with the goal of enhancing their capacity and selectivity for polar S/VOCs. Breakthrough tests were performed by challenging tubes packed with ∼2.5 mg of C-B or RTIL-coated C-B (RTIL/C-B) with 13 individual S/VOCs, including several organophosphorus compounds and reference alkyl and aromatic hydrocarbons of comparable vapor pressures, at concentrations ranging from 14 to 130 mg/m3. The 10% breakthrough volume, Vb10, was used as the measure of capacity. For the RTIL/C-B, the Vb10 values of the five organophosphorus vapors tested were consistently ∼2.5 times larger than those for the untreated C-B, and Vb10 values of the four non-polar reference vapors were 11–26 times smaller for the RTIL/C-B than for the untreated C-B. For compounds of similar vapor pressure the capacity ratios for polar vs. non-polar compounds with the RTIL/C-B ranged from 1.8 to 34. Similar results were obtained with C-X and RTIL/C-X on a smaller set of compounds. Tests at 70% relative humidity or with a binary mixture of a polar and non-polar compound had no effect on the capacity of the RTIL/C-B, and there were no changes in Vb10 values after several months of testing that included cycling from 25 to 250 °C. Capacity was strongly correlated with vapor pressure. Attempts to reconcile the selectivity using models based on linear-solvation-energy relationships were only partially successful. Nonetheless, these results indicate that RTIL coating of carbon adsorbents affords a simple, reliable means of rendering them selective for polar S/VOCs.
ISSN:0021-9673
1873-3778
DOI:10.1016/j.chroma.2019.460486