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Carbosieve Carbon Adsorbent

matrix Carbosieve G, 80-100 mesh, bottle of 5 g

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About This Item

EC Number:
UNSPSC Code:
23201100

product name

Carbosieve Adsorbent, matrix Carbosieve G, 80-100 mesh, bottle of 5 g

product line

Carbosieve

form

powder or granules

packaging

bottle of 5 g

technique(s)

LPLC: suitable
gas chromatography (GC): suitable
solid phase extraction (SPE): suitable

surface area

~1160 m2/g

matrix

Carbosieve G

matrix active group

carbon

particle size

80-100 mesh

pore size

~0.02 cm3/g mesoporosity
~0.49 cm3/g microporosity
~0 cm3/g macroporosity
~6-15 Å pore diameter

density

~0.27 g/mL (free fall density)

separation technique

reversed phase

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General description

A carbon molecular sieve (CMS) is the porous carbon skeletal framework that remains after pyrolysis of a polymeric precursor. These particles are:
  • Spherical (better packed bed performance than granular particles)
  • Hard and non-friable (pack well, will not break)
  • Highly porous (high surface areas)
  • Used for molecules with an analyte size relative to C2-C5 n-alkanes
  • Hydrophobic (can be used in high humidity environments)

Generally, CMS adsorbents offer greater relative adsorptive strength compared to spherical graphitized polymer carbon (SGPC) and graphitized carbon black (GCB) adsorbents. Our Carbosieve products are a type of CMS adsorbent.
  • Have non-tapered pores
  • Very strong adsorptive strength due to only containing micropores
  • Provide great performance for many small, volatile analytes that most adsorbents have trouble retaining

For more information about any of our specialty carbon adsorbents, please visit sigma-aldrich.com/carbon

Legal Information

Storage Class Code

11 - Combustible Solids

WGK

nwg

Flash Point(F)

Not applicable

Flash Point(C)

Not applicable

Personal Protective Equipment

dust mask type N95 (US), Eyeshields, Gloves

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T D DiStefano et al.
Applied and environmental microbiology, 57(8), 2287-2292 (1991-08-01)
Tetrachloroethene, also known as perchloroethylene (PCE), is a common groundwater contaminant throughout the United States. The incomplete reductive dechlorination of PCE--resulting in accumulations of trichloroethene, dichloroethene isomers, and/or vinyl chloride--has been observed by many investigators in a wide variety of
C Y Peng et al.
Journal of environmental monitoring : JEM, 2(4), 313-324 (2001-03-16)
Air sampling, using sorbents, thermal desorption and gas chromatography, is a versatile method for identifying and quantifying trace levels of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Thermal desorption can provide high sensitivity, appropropriate choices of sorbents and method parameters can accommodate a
Juliane Hollender et al.
Journal of chromatography. A, 962(1-2), 175-181 (2002-08-30)
A simple method using active trapping on adsorbents and thermal desorption followed by GC-MS analysis was developed for the indoor air monitoring of monoterpenes. The study was carried out using a dynamically generated atmosphere consisting of 11 monoterpenes: camphene, camphor
D R Nelson et al.
Applied microbiology, 28(2), 258-261 (1974-08-01)
A gas chromatographic procedure for the simultaneous analysis of (14)C-labeled and unlabeled metabolic gases from microbial methanogenic systems is described. H(2), CH(4), and CO(2) were separated within 2.5 min on a Carbosieve B column and were detected by thermal conductivity.
Stuart Batterman et al.
Journal of environmental monitoring : JEM, 4(3), 361-370 (2002-07-04)
While air sampling techniques using adsorbent-based collection, thermal desorption and chromatographic analysis have found a niche in ambient air sampling, occupational applications have been more limited. This paper evaluates the use of thermal desorption techniques for low flow active and

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