Analysis of trace metallic impurities in hydrocarbon fuels by ICP-MS
Applications | 2013 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Trace metallic impurities in hydrocarbon fuels can adversely affect engine performance, emission profiles, catalyst lifetime and regulatory compliance. Accurate, sensitive and robust methods are essential for quality control in petroleum refining, automotive fuels and heating applications. Overcoming matrix effects from volatile solvents and achieving low detection limits are key analytical challenges.
This application note presents a unified ICP-MS procedure to quantify trace metals in various fuel matrices including gasoline, diesel, fuel oils and alcohol blends. The method is validated with NIST SRM 1634c residual fuel oil and applied to commercial samples. Key aims include determining detection limits, assessing long-term stability and demonstrating applicability across a wide viscosity and volatility range.
Fuel samples are diluted in high-purity kerosene with an yttrium internal standard to control drift. Exactly weighed aliquots are brought to volume in PFA flasks, then aspirated into an Agilent 7700x ICP-MS. A collision cell operated with helium energy discrimination and hydrogen modes minimizes polyatomic interferences. Calibration is performed via serial dilution of multi-element organometallic standards.
Detection limits ranged from mid-ppt to sub-ppb in kerosene. Background equivalent concentrations typically remained below 1 ppb. Long-term precision was better than 2% RSD over seven hours. Analysis of commercial fuels showed metal levels from < 1 µg/kg up to hundreds of µg/kg depending on fuel type. Results for NIST SRM 1634c matched certified values within 5%, confirming accuracy.
This streamlined ICP-MS method enables consistent metal monitoring across diverse fuel types with minimal method adjustments. High throughput and low detection limits support process control in refineries, automotive fuel QA/QC and environmental compliance testing.
Expanding this approach to biofuels and synthetic fuels will address emerging markets. Integration with automated sample handling, direct injection techniques and online monitoring systems can further enhance efficiency. Advanced interference correction and novel collision gases may lower detection limits for challenging matrices.
The described Agilent 7700x ICP-MS protocol provides a robust, sensitive and versatile solution for trace metal analysis in hydrocarbon fuels. Reliable detection across a wide range of matrices and excellent stability make it ideal for routine QA/QC and regulatory testing.
ICP/MS
IndustriesEnergy & Chemicals
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the topic
Trace metallic impurities in hydrocarbon fuels can adversely affect engine performance, emission profiles, catalyst lifetime and regulatory compliance. Accurate, sensitive and robust methods are essential for quality control in petroleum refining, automotive fuels and heating applications. Overcoming matrix effects from volatile solvents and achieving low detection limits are key analytical challenges.
Objectives and overview of the study
This application note presents a unified ICP-MS procedure to quantify trace metals in various fuel matrices including gasoline, diesel, fuel oils and alcohol blends. The method is validated with NIST SRM 1634c residual fuel oil and applied to commercial samples. Key aims include determining detection limits, assessing long-term stability and demonstrating applicability across a wide viscosity and volatility range.
Methodology
Fuel samples are diluted in high-purity kerosene with an yttrium internal standard to control drift. Exactly weighed aliquots are brought to volume in PFA flasks, then aspirated into an Agilent 7700x ICP-MS. A collision cell operated with helium energy discrimination and hydrogen modes minimizes polyatomic interferences. Calibration is performed via serial dilution of multi-element organometallic standards.
Instrumentation
- Agilent 7700x ICP-MS
- Glass concentric nebulizer, quartz torch with 1.5 mm injector
- Platinum-tipped sampling and skimmer cones
- Collision cell: He energy mode and H₂ mode for selected isotopes
- Internal standard: Yttrium in kerosene
Main results and discussion
Detection limits ranged from mid-ppt to sub-ppb in kerosene. Background equivalent concentrations typically remained below 1 ppb. Long-term precision was better than 2% RSD over seven hours. Analysis of commercial fuels showed metal levels from < 1 µg/kg up to hundreds of µg/kg depending on fuel type. Results for NIST SRM 1634c matched certified values within 5%, confirming accuracy.
Benefits and practical applications
This streamlined ICP-MS method enables consistent metal monitoring across diverse fuel types with minimal method adjustments. High throughput and low detection limits support process control in refineries, automotive fuel QA/QC and environmental compliance testing.
Future trends and applications
Expanding this approach to biofuels and synthetic fuels will address emerging markets. Integration with automated sample handling, direct injection techniques and online monitoring systems can further enhance efficiency. Advanced interference correction and novel collision gases may lower detection limits for challenging matrices.
Conclusion
The described Agilent 7700x ICP-MS protocol provides a robust, sensitive and versatile solution for trace metal analysis in hydrocarbon fuels. Reliable detection across a wide range of matrices and excellent stability make it ideal for routine QA/QC and regulatory testing.
References
- Junichi Takahashi and Kei Kasahara, Analysis of metallic components in lubricating oils by ICP-MS, Agilent Application Note, 5991-3263EN.
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