Halogens in a highly viscous petrochemical sample applying Combustion IC
Applications | | MetrohmInstrumentation
Determining halogens such as chloride and sulfate in viscous petrochemical samples is crucial for monitoring environmental emissions, informing corrosion risk, and ensuring product quality. However, high viscosity and elevated sulfate levels complicate standard analytical protocols, requiring robust sample introduction and sensitive detection strategies.
This application note demonstrates a workflow combining sample combustion and ion chromatography with conductivity detection to quantify chloride and assess sulfate in a highly viscous oil matrix. The primary goal is to evaluate method suitability for trace halogen analysis under challenging sample conditions.
The protocol involves:
Chloride was reliably quantified at 36.5 mg/kg in the original oil matrix, corresponding to 0.28 mg/L in the injected solution. Nitrite, nitrate, and sulfate exceeded the quantification threshold and were thus not reported. Phosphate, used as an internal standard, was maintained at 1.00 mg/L. The high sulfate background indicates a need for adjusted dilution or calibration range extensions for complete halogen profiling.
This approach offers:
Enhancements may include:
The described combustion IC method reliably quantifies chloride in highly viscous petrochemical samples and provides a qualitative assessment of sulfate. The technique's robustness and minimal sample pretreatment render it suitable for routine quality control and environmental monitoring.
Metrohm Application Note CIC–001, Version 1.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerMetrohm
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Determining halogens such as chloride and sulfate in viscous petrochemical samples is crucial for monitoring environmental emissions, informing corrosion risk, and ensuring product quality. However, high viscosity and elevated sulfate levels complicate standard analytical protocols, requiring robust sample introduction and sensitive detection strategies.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note demonstrates a workflow combining sample combustion and ion chromatography with conductivity detection to quantify chloride and assess sulfate in a highly viscous oil matrix. The primary goal is to evaluate method suitability for trace halogen analysis under challenging sample conditions.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The protocol involves:
- Combusting a weighed oil sample in a furnace at 900–1000 °C to convert halides into water-soluble ions.
- Absorbing combustion products in a peroxide/phosphate solution (5 mL).
- Analyzing the resulting solution via ion chromatography using an 881 Compact IC pro system with a sequential suppression conductivity detector.
- Columns: Metrosep A Supp 5 (150/4.0) and Metrosep A Supp 4/5 Guard.
- Eluent: 3.2 mmol/L sodium carbonate, 1.0 mmol/L sodium hydrogen carbonate;
- Suppressor regenerant: 100 mmol/L sulfuric acid;
- Flow rate: 0.7 mL/min; Injection volume: 100 μL; Runtime: 18 min; Column temperature: 30 °C.
Results and Discussion
Chloride was reliably quantified at 36.5 mg/kg in the original oil matrix, corresponding to 0.28 mg/L in the injected solution. Nitrite, nitrate, and sulfate exceeded the quantification threshold and were thus not reported. Phosphate, used as an internal standard, was maintained at 1.00 mg/L. The high sulfate background indicates a need for adjusted dilution or calibration range extensions for complete halogen profiling.
Benefits and Practical Applications
This approach offers:
- Efficient liberation of bound halogens from viscous matrices via high-temperature combustion;
- High sensitivity detection of chloride at trace levels;
- Compatibility with complex oil samples without extensive pretreatment;
- Streamlined workflow combining sample digestion and chromatographic analysis.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Enhancements may include:
- Extending calibration ranges or using on-line dilution to quantify high-level analytes like sulfate;
- Automated sample handling for increased throughput;
- Integration with mass spectrometric detectors for improved specificity;
- Adapting combustion IC for multi-element halogen profiling in various industrial matrices.
Conclusion
The described combustion IC method reliably quantifies chloride in highly viscous petrochemical samples and provides a qualitative assessment of sulfate. The technique's robustness and minimal sample pretreatment render it suitable for routine quality control and environmental monitoring.
References
Metrohm Application Note CIC–001, Version 1.
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