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

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Abstract

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.

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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. https://doi.org/10.5478/MSL.2012.3.1.025

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