Pyro-GC-MS
What Is Pyro-GC-MS?
Pyrolysis GC-MS (Py-GC/MS) is a technique that thermally decomposes a sample and analyzes the resulting fragments by GC-MS. It is especially powerful for identifying polymers, resins, adhesives, rubbers, coatings, waxes, and complex organic residues that are difficult to dissolve or analyze by standard GC-MS or LC-MS. By converting solid or high-molecular-weight materials into characteristic pyrolysis products, Py-GC/MS delivers highly diagnostic “fingerprints” for material identification and comparative investigations.
We provide Py-GC/MS testing for material identification, contamination and residue investigations, supplier/lot comparisons, and failure/root-cause analysis, supporting R&D, QC troubleshooting, and reliability investigations.
What Pyro-GC-MS Is Used For
Py-GC/MS is commonly used to:
Identify unknown plastics, rubbers, resins, and coatings
Differentiate similar-looking materials (e.g., polymer blends, copolymers, adhesive systems)
Investigate black specks, gels, deposits, residues, and films
Evaluate additives and degradation markers (antioxidants, plasticizers, slip agents—project-dependent)
Compare supplier lots and detect formulation drift
Support failure analysis (delamination, cracking, residue formation, contamination)
Why Py-GC/MS (vs. Conventional GC-MS)?
Traditional GC-MS typically analyzes compounds that are already volatile or extractable. Many polymers and residues are not. Py-GC/MS enables:
Direct analysis of solids with minimal sample preparation
High-confidence polymer family identification through characteristic fragments
Detection of polymeric contaminants that do not appear in solvent extracts
Comparative fingerprinting when “unknown” material varies subtly between lots
Sample Types We Support
Py-GC/MS is well suited for (matrix-dependent):
Plastics and polymers: pellets, films, molded parts, fibers
Rubbers and elastomers: seals, gaskets, O-rings (project-dependent)
Adhesives and sealants: cured joints, tapes, PSA residues
Coatings and paints: flakes, chips, cured films, residues
Inks and printed layers (project-dependent)
Deposits and contaminants: gels, sludge, varnish, filter debris, black specks
Composite or filled materials (project-dependent): polymers with inorganic fillers
Typical Workflows
Material Identification (Unknown Polymer/Residue)
Best for: unknown solids, incoming verification
Pyrolysis fingerprint acquisition
Library/knowledge-based interpretation and polymer family assignment
Supporting evidence using complementary tools (FTIR/Raman, SEM-EDS) if needed
Comparative Fingerprinting (“What Changed?”)
Best for: supplier change, lot drift, stability aging
Side-by-side overlay of pyrolysis patterns
Highlighted differentiating peaks and likely chemical origins
Practical interpretation: formulation drift vs contamination vs degradation
Failure / Contamination Investigation
Best for: black specks, gels, deposits, delamination residues
Py-GC/MS to identify organic component(s)
Pair with SEM-EDS for inorganic fillers/particles and FTIR/Raman for confirmatory checks
Root-cause direction based on combined evidence
Typical Applications by Industry
Polymers & plastics: resin ID, additive/degradation signatures, black specks/gels
Adhesives & sealants: PSA ID, bond-line residue comparison, cure drift (project-dependent)
Coatings & paints: binder identification, residue/failure surface materials
Electronics & semiconductors (project-dependent): contamination films, polymer residues
Medical devices: silicone/polymer residue identification, particulate root-cause (project-dependent)
Lubricants & greases: varnish/sludge organic residue identification (project-dependent)
Food/cosmetics packaging (project-dependent): polymer contamination and odor-related residues
What You Receive
Pyrolysis chromatogram(s) with key peak labeling
Identification summary: likely polymer family/material type, confidence notes, and supporting rationale
Comparative difference summary (if reference vs suspect provided)
Recommendations for confirmatory testing when needed (e.g., FTIR, SEM-EDS, XPS)
Sample Submission Guidelines
Please provide
Sample description (polymer type if known), form (film/pellet/part/residue), and target question
Lot/batch IDs and any process or aging history (heat, UV, solvents, cleaning steps)
Reference/control sample whenever possible
SDS for hazardous or unknown materials
Typical sample amounts
Solids: 10–100 mg can be sufficient for Py-GC/MS (more is helpful for repeats)
Films/coatings: a few small pieces (clean, representative)
Residues/particles: as available (mg-level often workable)
Packaging tips
Avoid contamination: use clean tools and containers
Keep samples dry and sealed; separate reference vs suspect
For residues on parts, protect the residue area from rubbing/contact
FAQs
Can Py-GC/MS quantify additives or composition?
Py-GC/MS is primarily qualitative/semi-quantitative for identification and comparison. Absolute quantitation typically requires targeted methods with standards.
Can Py-GC/MS identify very small contaminants (e.g., black specks)?
Often yes, especially when combined with SEM-EDS and FTIR/Raman to confirm inorganic/organic components.
How is this different from FTIR?
FTIR is fast for polymer family ID on clean surfaces, but can struggle with mixtures, thin films, and low-level contaminants. Py-GC/MS can provide deeper chemical fingerprints, especially for complex blends and residues.
Will fillers affect the result?
Inorganic fillers generally do not pyrolyze, but they can dilute organics. We often pair Py-GC/MS with SEM-EDS to characterize fillers and particles.
Is the test destructive?
Yes. Pyrolysis consumes the analyzed portion of the sample.
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- yangxbd@gmail.com