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29750-U

Supelco

Carbotrap® 217 Thermal Desorption Tube

greener alternative

glass, O.D. x L 1/4 in. × 3 1/2 in., fritted, preconditioned, pkg of 10 ea

Synonym(s):

Carbotrap® 217

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About This Item

UNSPSC Code:
41104008
NACRES:
NB.24

product name

Carbotrap® 217, O.D. × L 1/4 in. × 3 1/2 in., glass TD tube, fritted, Sealed with Brass Endcaps, preconditioned, pkg of 10 ea

material

glass TD tube

Agency

EPA TO-14 (Air Toxics)
EPA TO-17

feature

fritted
preconditioned

packaging

pkg of 10 ea

greener alternative product characteristics

Waste Prevention
Safer Solvents and Auxiliaries
Learn more about the Principles of Green Chemistry.

sustainability

Greener Alternative Product

O.D. × L

1/4 in. × 3 1/2 in.

matrix

Carbopack graphitized carbon black (GCB)
Carbotrap® 217 Packed with Carbotrap B and Carboxen-1000
Carboxen® 1000 carbon molecular sieve (CMS)

application(s)

environmental
industrial hygiene

compatibility

for use with PerkinElmer, Markes, DANI, OI Analytical, and Shimadzu Instruments

greener alternative category

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General description

We are committed to bringing you greener alternative products, which adhere to one or more of The 12 Principles of Greener Chemistry. Thermal desorption tubes are reusable at least 50 to 100 times, and reduces the usage of accessories like transfer vials, caps, and pipette tips, thus aligns with “Waste Prevention”. Also, these tubes eliminate the usage of toxic solvents like CS2 to extract the VOCs of interest, and thus aligns with “Safer Solvents and Auxiliaries” principle. Click here for more information.

Legal Information

Carbopack is a trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany
Carbotrap is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany
Carboxen is a registered trademark of Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany

Storage Class Code

11 - Combustible Solids

WGK

WGK 3

Flash Point(F)

Not applicable

Flash Point(C)

Not applicable


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S Ghittori et al.
Giornale italiano di medicina del lavoro, 10(4-5), 201-205 (1988-07-01)
A laboratory study, using generated atmosphere containing 0.14/23.3 mg/m3 of Benzene, was conducted to adapt an existing industrial hygiene monitoring method for measuring low concentrations of Benzene. This method was developed to determine concentrations of Benzene in the ambient air
Florian Gahleitner et al.
Bioanalysis, 5(18), 2239-2247 (2013-09-24)
In-community non-invasive identification of asthma-specific volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath presents opportunities to characterize phenotypes, and monitor disease state and therapies. The feasibility of breath sampling with children and the preliminary identification of childhood asthma markers were studied.
M L Fiorentino et al.
La Medicina del lavoro, 81(2), 107-118 (1990-03-01)
Benzene is a widely diffuse solvent (atmosphere, cigarette smoke, some foods); in the industrial environment benzene is currently present at concentrations of ppm. A valid method of biological monitoring that is easy to perform is needed for assessing occupational and
S Ghittori et al.
Journal of toxicology and environmental health, 38(3), 233-243 (1993-03-01)
Benzene concentrations in urine samples (Cu, ng/L) from 110 workers exposed to benzene in chemical plants and gasoline pumps were determined by injecting urine supernate into a gas chromatograph. The urine was saturated with anhydrous N2SO4 to facilitate the passage
Yifei Sun et al.
Journal of environmental sciences (China), 25(1), 213-219 (2013-04-17)
A group parameter approach using "total organic halogen" is effective for monitoring gaseous organic halogen compounds, including fluorine, chlorine, and bromine compounds, generated from combustion. We described the use of barrier-discharge radiofrequency-helium-plasma/atomic emission spectrometry, for the detection of semi- and

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