University of Wollongong
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Paint spray mass spectrometry for the detection of additives from polymers on conducting surfaces

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posted on 2024-11-16, 07:40 authored by Martin Paine, Philip BarkerPhilip Barker, Stephen Blanksby
Paint Spray is developed as a direct sampling ionisation method for mass spectrometric analysis of additives in polymer-based surface coatings. The technique simply involves applying an external high voltage (5 kV) to the wetted sample placed in front of the mass spectrometer inlet and represents a much simpler ionisation technique compared to those currently available. The capabilities of Paint Spray are demonstrated herein with the detection of four commercially available hindered amine light stabilisers; TINUVIN® 770, TINUVIN® 292, TINUVIN® 123 and TINUVIN® 152 directly from thermoset polyester-based coil coatings. Paint Spray requires no sample preparation or pre-treatment and combined with its simplicity – requiring no specialised equipment – makes it ideal for use by non-specialists. The application of Paint Spray for industrial use has significant potential as sample collection from a coil coating production line and Paint Spray ionisation could enable fast quality control screening at high sensitivity.

Funding

Why is ColorbondR steel greener on the other side of the fence? Designing additives to retard weathering of surface coatings

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Paine, M. R.L., Barker, P. J. & Blanksby, S. J. (2012). Paint spray mass spectrometry for the detection of additives from polymers on conducting surfaces. Mass Spectrometry Letters, 3 (1), 25-28.

Journal title

Mass Spectrometry Letters

Volume

3

Issue

1

Pagination

25-28

Language

English

RIS ID

77998

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