Determination of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment
Posters | | MetrohmInstrumentation
Electronic waste is increasing by 3–5% annually in Europe, leading to growing environmental and health risks from toxic substances. Compliance with the RoHS Directive is critical to limit hazardous metals and flame retardants in electrical and electronic equipment.
This work aims to develop and validate wet-chemical analytical protocols for quantifying six RoHS-restricted substances (lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, PBBs, PBDEs) across diverse matrices including metals, plastics, cables, and polymer components.
Sample preparation follows IEC 62321 procedures (acid digestion, extraction, combustion for halides). Analytical techniques include:
Voltammetric methods achieved sub-microgram per liter detection limits for heavy metals, and ion chromatography enabled quantification of flame retardants at low mg/kg levels. All protocols meet or exceed RoHS regulatory thresholds.
Future developments may include miniaturized sensors, multiplexed element detection, automation of sample preparation, and non-destructive screening techniques to improve throughput and broaden environmental monitoring capabilities.
Combining voltammetry and ion chromatography provides a comprehensive, reliable toolkit for enforcing RoHS compliance, protecting environmental and public health while ensuring product quality.
No external literature references were provided in the original document.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerMetrohm
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Electronic waste is increasing by 3–5% annually in Europe, leading to growing environmental and health risks from toxic substances. Compliance with the RoHS Directive is critical to limit hazardous metals and flame retardants in electrical and electronic equipment.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work aims to develop and validate wet-chemical analytical protocols for quantifying six RoHS-restricted substances (lead, cadmium, mercury, hexavalent chromium, PBBs, PBDEs) across diverse matrices including metals, plastics, cables, and polymer components.
Methodology
Sample preparation follows IEC 62321 procedures (acid digestion, extraction, combustion for halides). Analytical techniques include:
- Anodic stripping voltammetry for lead, cadmium, and mercury using differential pulse mode.
- Adsorptive stripping voltammetry or ion chromatography for hexavalent chromium determination.
- Direct-injection ion chromatography with UV/VIS detection for polybrominated flame retardants.
- Combustion ion chromatography for trace halide analysis in non-aqueous matrices.
Used Instrumentation
- Voltammetry: Metrohm 797 VA Computrace.
- Ion Chromatography (UV/VIS): Metrohm 844 UV/VIS Compact IC.
- Autosampler and IC Modules: Metrohm 863 Compact IC Autosampler; 881 Compact IC Pro–Anion–MCS; Post-Column Reactor.
- Combustion IC: Metrohm MultiTek Combustion IC.
Main Results and Discussion
Voltammetric methods achieved sub-microgram per liter detection limits for heavy metals, and ion chromatography enabled quantification of flame retardants at low mg/kg levels. All protocols meet or exceed RoHS regulatory thresholds.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
- Robust compliance testing for manufacturers and QA/QC laboratories.
- Versatile applicability to metals, polymers, and cable materials.
- High sensitivity and selectivity with rapid analysis times.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Future developments may include miniaturized sensors, multiplexed element detection, automation of sample preparation, and non-destructive screening techniques to improve throughput and broaden environmental monitoring capabilities.
Conclusion
Combining voltammetry and ion chromatography provides a comprehensive, reliable toolkit for enforcing RoHS compliance, protecting environmental and public health while ensuring product quality.
References
No external literature references were provided in the original document.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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