Dugway News

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    Chemists (pictured from left) Jeremy Jex, Hannah Line and Travis Losser with the Chemical Test Division’s Chemical Analytical Branch stand in front of a GC-QQQ, a highly sensitive instrument that they proved can be used to analyze chemical warfare agents. Their supervisor, Dr. Richard Phan (not pictured), provided support during the process and fellow colleagues Judy Fox, Rebecca Mine and Alexander Grimaldi contributed to the project. The group will present their findings during a virtual technical conference in early March. Photo by Becki Bryant, Dugway Public Affairs.
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  • Chemists (pictured from left) Jeremy Jex, Hannah Line and Travis Losser with the Chemical Test Division’s Chemical Analytical Branch stand in front of a GC-QQQ, a highly sensitive instrument that they proved can be used to analyze chemical warfare agents. Their supervisor, Dr. Richard Phan (not pictured), provided support during the process and fellow colleagues Judy Fox, Rebecca Mine and Alexander Grimaldi contributed to the project. The group will present their findings during a virtual technical conference in early March. Photo by Becki Bryant, Dugway Public Affairs.
  • The extracted solvent is analyzed using a Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry Triple Quadrupole (GC-QQQ), which can run 150 samples at once, drastically reducing needed manpower compared to the thermal desorption method, which requires an analyst to load each transfer tube one by one onto the thermal desorber. The GC-QQQ is more sensitive and can reach the lower concentrations (ng) compared to analyzing agents in a solvent with a normal GC-single quadrupole (ug). Photo by Becki Bryant, Dugway Public Affairs.
  • The solid sorbent tubes are placed into a vial at one end and a pump system at the other end. The solvent from up to 12 tubes can be extracted at one time. For the study, the agent was extracted at a rate of 0.25mL/minute for four minutes. Photo courtesy of Chemical Analytical Branch, West Desert Test Center.
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DPG Chemists Develop New Analytical Method for CWA

Dugway Proving Ground chemists have developed a new method for solid sorbent tube (SST) analysis of chemical warfare agents (CWA). The innovative approach is to analyze an eluate from the SST using a Gas Chromatography Triple Quadrople Mass Spectrometry (GC-QQQ) instead of thermally analyzing the SST using a Gas Chromatography-Flame Photometric Detector (GC-FPD). The end result

“We have not seen any external reports about analyses of chemical warfare agent eluted from the SST using the GC-QQQ or actual studies to prove that it is a viable process to be utilized in supporting tests,” noted Dr. Richard Phan, Chemical Analytical Branch Chief.

The GC-QQQ is a highly sensitive instrument. Chemists Jeremy Jex, Hannah Line and Travis Losser, with the help of Phan, took on the extensive work to successfully develop quantitative methods for ultra-trace analysis of traditional CWA, such as nerve agents GA, GB, GD, GF and VX and mustard (HD) blister agent.

The group had to develop acquisition models for the new instrument, including the method detection limit and the limit of quantification, for each chemical agent. They validated their standards and quality control samples, running a calibration curve on the GC-QQQ to determine the instrument’s official limits. Once that was completed, the group conducted CWA recover efficiency studies from the elution for each agent. The elution method pulls the solvent through the SST to extract CWA into a vial.

“The extracted CWA from the elution were found to be around 96 percent efficient,” shared Line. “Techniques like this that can detect chemical warfare agents at lower levels help ensure better quality of testing and give us capabilities we didn’t have previously.”

Additional benefits of using the GC-QQQ include ease of operation and increased output because it bypasses the need for a confirmation/transfer tube, since the mass spectrometer is the confirmation.

“We wanted to get away from thermal desorption using GC-FPD because it is labor intensive and can’t be automated so it requires an analyst to be with the instruments the whole time,” said Jex. “This new extraction method is much less labor intensive.” The GC-QQQ coupled with an autosampler allows up to 150 samples to be sequentially analyzed in one completely unattended run, “increasing productivity and providing time to work on data packages instead of manually inserting transfer tubes one by one,” Jex noted.

Instead of a transfer tube, the new elution method provides another advantage. “The solvent can be stored and reanalyzed with various instrumentation and multiple analyses,” said Losser, who created the methodology for the new extraction process. “With the thermal desorption method, there is no remaining sample for reanalysis. It’s a one-and-done analysis.”

Now that chemists Jex, Line, Losser and Phan have proven the GC-QQQ is a viable method for chemical warfare agent analysis, it can be used to support future tests. The group will present their findings in early March during a virtual chemical analytical technical conference.