Analysis of Inorganic and Organic Anions in Galvanic Samples Using the Agilent 7100 CE
Applications | 2023 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) is valuable for monitoring inorganic and organic anions in aggressive galvanic bath matrices. Compared to ion chromatography, CE’s free capillary columns offer enhanced robustness in high-metal-content samples and minimal sample preparation. Reliable indirect UV detection enables simultaneous quantification of multiple anions and potential metal-complex species, supporting quality control and environmental monitoring in electroplating operations.
This study demonstrates an Agilent 7100 CE method for separation and quantification of key anions in plating baths and related wastewater from electroless and electrolytic processes. Key aims include:
This CE approach requires only simple dilution of samples, no complex extraction, and employs readily available consumables. It facilitates rapid, high-throughput monitoring of plating bath composition, process control of electroless and electrolytic coatings, and assessment of wastewater treatment efficacy.
The Agilent 7100 CE method offers a fast, robust, and precise tool for analyzing inorganic and organic anions in galvanic baths and related effluents. Its minimal sample preparation, high separation efficiency, and excellent linearity make it suitable for routine industrial and environmental applications.
Capillary electrophoresis
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the topic
Capillary electrophoresis (CE) is valuable for monitoring inorganic and organic anions in aggressive galvanic bath matrices. Compared to ion chromatography, CE’s free capillary columns offer enhanced robustness in high-metal-content samples and minimal sample preparation. Reliable indirect UV detection enables simultaneous quantification of multiple anions and potential metal-complex species, supporting quality control and environmental monitoring in electroplating operations.
Study objectives and overview
This study demonstrates an Agilent 7100 CE method for separation and quantification of key anions in plating baths and related wastewater from electroless and electrolytic processes. Key aims include:
- Optimizing a ready-to-use plating bath buffer for indirect UV detection and electroosmotic flow control
- Evaluating calibration linearity across a 10–100 mg/L concentration range
- Applying the method to real galvanic and wastewater samples
Methodology and instrumentation
- Buffer: Commercial plating bath buffer containing an organic acid, EOF modifier, and UV-transparent electrolyte
- Capillary: 72 cm fused silica, 50 µm ID
- Injection: 30 s at 50 mbar, plus a 5 s post-injection with buffer
- Detection: Indirect UV (signal 350 nm/80 nm, reference 245 nm/30 nm)
- Voltage/temperature: −30 kV, 20 °C
- Preconditioning: 180 s flush at 1 bar
Main results and discussion
- Complete separation of malate, hypophosphite, phosphite, phosphate, chloride, sulfate and a negative nickel complex was achieved within 8 minutes.
- Calibration over 10–100 mg/L yielded correlation coefficients >0.999 for major anions, supporting accurate quantification with minimal standards.
- Electroless nickel-phosphorus bath analysis revealed depletion of hypophosphite and accumulation of phosphite.
- Wastewater samples before and after purification demonstrated effective conversion of hypophosphite and phosphite to phosphate, confirming treatment progress.
- Additional analyses of nickel–palladium, palladium–nickel and zinc–nickel baths validated method versatility across different electroplating formulations.
Benefits and practical applications
This CE approach requires only simple dilution of samples, no complex extraction, and employs readily available consumables. It facilitates rapid, high-throughput monitoring of plating bath composition, process control of electroless and electrolytic coatings, and assessment of wastewater treatment efficacy.
Future trends and possibilities
- Integration of CE with real-time monitoring could enable closed-loop process control in plating lines.
- Expansion to trace metal analysis through metal-complex detection or dual-detection systems.
- Development of portable CE platforms for on-site environmental compliance testing.
Conclusion
The Agilent 7100 CE method offers a fast, robust, and precise tool for analyzing inorganic and organic anions in galvanic baths and related effluents. Its minimal sample preparation, high separation efficiency, and excellent linearity make it suitable for routine industrial and environmental applications.
Used instrumentation
- Agilent 7100 Capillary Electrophoresis System, firmware B.07.021
- Ready-to-use plating bath buffer (Agilent, product 5064-8236)
- Fused silica capillary, 50 µm ID, 72 cm (Agilent, G1600-62211)
Reference
- Soga, T. Capillary Zone Electrophoresis for Electroless Plating Bath Samples. Agilent Technologies Application Note 5991-1105EN, 2012.
- Ion Analysis with Agilent Capillary Electrophoresis Systems. Agilent Technologies Application Compendium 5990-5244EN, 2010, pp. 25–26.
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