Determination of brominated alkylbenzenes in nickel industry sludge by capillary gas chromatography

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Capillary gas chromatography coupled to both mass spectrometry (GCMS) and atomic emission spectroscopy (GC-AED) was studied for the analysis of bromine-containing alkylbenzenes present in sludge from a nickel refinery. Owing to the high abundance of chlorinated compounds, location of the brominated species was difficult based on GC-MS with electron ionization. In contrast, GC-MS with negative chemical ionization (GC-NCIMS) and GC-AED enabled bromine-selective detection and were utilized for an effective location of the brominated compounds. Bromine-selective detection by GC-NCIMS relied on the monitoring of Br- (m/z 79/81) with CH4 as ionization gas, while atomic emission (827.2 nm) from a helium plasma was utilized in the case of GC-AED. While GC-NCIMS was 30-500 times more sensitive than GC-AED, the latter technique was superior for quantitative purposes. Because the bromine response of the AED was independent of molecular structure, quantification was possible without reference material.

Original languageEnglish
JournalChromatographia
Volume46
Issue number7-8
Pages (from-to)411-418
Number of pages8
ISSN0009-5893
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 18 Oct 1997

    Research areas

  • Atomic emission spectroscopy, Brominated alkylbenzenes, Gas chromatography, Negative chemical ionization mass spectrometry

ID: 231655662