Mass Spectrometry & Spectroscopy
New Application Report Describes Rapid ROHS Screening for Toxic Metals in Polyethylene by XRF
Aug 24 2016
Applied Rigaku Technologies, Inc has announced a new empirical method for the measurement of toxic elements in plastics by energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence (EDXRF). Rigaku EDXRF Application Note #1602 describes the measurement of chromium (Cr), mercury (Hg), lead (Pb), bromine (Br) and cadmium (Cd) in polyethylene (PE), and demonstrates the performance of the Rigaku NEX DE VS EDXRF spectrometer.
The Restriction on Hazardous Substances initiative (RoHS) limits the allowable amounts of toxic elements in plastics and consumer goods. Energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence is an established analysis technique for rapid screening and quantification of the hazardous elements according to RoHS norms.
For the analysis detailed in this report, measurement was performed using the NEX DE VS analyser equipped with automatic collimators and a camera for sample positioning and imaging. The unit is designed to give QA/QC technicians a means for fast, simple screening and analysis of materials that must conform to RoHS and similar directives.
The new application report includes information about method calibration and sensitivity validation, as well as details about the instrument’s RoHS software and reporting.
The results detailed in the report show outstanding performance by the NEX DE VS analyser, which provides exceptional sensitivity and reliable precision for RoHS rapid screening by EDXRF down to 1 mm spot size.
A copy of this application report may be requested on Rigaku’s EDXRF website.
Digital Edition
LMUK 49.7 Nov 2024
November 2024
News - Research & Events News - News & Views Articles - They’re burning the labs... Spotlight Features - Incubators, Freezers & Cooling Equipment - Pumps, Valves & Liquid Hand...
View all digital editions
Events
Nov 11 2024 Dusseldorf, Germany
Nov 12 2024 Cologne, Germany
Nov 12 2024 Tel Aviv, Israel
Nov 18 2024 Shanghai, China
Nov 20 2024 Karachi, Pakistan