Small Dry Box For Sampling - Analytical Chemistry (ACS Publications)

Jun 13, 2002 - Anal. Chem. , 1957, 29 (5), pp 861–861. DOI: 10.1021/ac60125a614. Publication Date: May 1957. ACS Legacy Archive. Cite this:Anal. Che...
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Small Dry Box for Sampling E. C. Fiebig, E.

L.

Spencer, and R. N. McCoy, Shell Development Co., Emeryville, Calif.

o w analytical laboratories are "periodically called upon to analyze air- or mater-sensitive materials. Standard coinmercial dry boxes generally consist of large boxlike structures fitted with various accessories and are intended for a variety of operations which are conducted by means of rubber gloves attached to the box. They are expensive, require an excessive amount of laboratory space, and consume large volumes of inert gas for purging, and the gloves make delicate handling operations difficult. I n addition, they are difficult to clean if a noxious material is spilled. Franklin and V o h [ANAL.C H E x 27, 865 (1955)] recently described a small low-cost plastic bag which overcomes most of these disadvantages. For the limited purpose of sampling materials for analysis the authors have devised a small, compact dry box based upon use of an inverted 150-mm. glass funnel. All operations are conducted through an open 16 x 50 mm. slot cut in the side of the funnel. The entrance of significant amounts of air or water vapor is prevented by a continuous outflow of inert gas through the same slot. The dry box is illustrated in Figure 1. The funnel, A , is a common glass funnel which has had a slot cut in the side by drilling two holes and making connecting cuts between them with a Carborundum cutting wheel. The hollow stainless steel base, B, has twelve 0.03-inch holes drilled in a &inchdiameter circle t o facilitate purging with inert gas. It is fitted with two rubber and two threaded feet (to enable the entire box to be tilted), a gas inlet fitting, C, and four small metal blocks glued to the top in such a manner that the funnel can be slid from front to rear without uncovering any of the holes. The sample vial holder, D, is solid metal and is held from sliding by two short metal pins set in the base. The front face is beveled a t an angle of 45" to enable the sample to be seen clearly. An oversize hole (0.75 inch for 2-dram vials) is drilled almost through the block from the front a t an angle of 20" from the horizontal to hold sample vials. This angle is such that liquid in nearly empty vials is accessible while nearly full vials do not overflow. A sheet metal table, E, is fitted over the sample vial holder as shonm. The clips hold horizontal-type weighing bottles which contain boats or other open sample containers during m-eighing and handling operations outside the dry box. The front space on the table provides a working area when the sample is being transferred to boats or other sample containers.

The cap remover, F , has metal fingers which grip the vial cap by spring tension as shown. A screw-type pinch clamp is placed on the rubber tubing, G, a t point H and used for proportioning the gas flow between the top and bottom of the dry box. In use, the funnel is removed and the sample vial is placed in the block and !\-edged securely in place with a rubber wedge. Appropriate sample receivers are placed on the table and the funnel is replaced. Inert gas is passed into the box a t a rate of about 5 liters per minute. After 2 minutes of purging, the cap remover is inserted through the slot and slipped over the vial cap, and the cap is unscrewed and placed to one side inside the dry box. The entire dry box is tilted, if necessary, to make the contents of the vial accessible, and the desired quantity of sample is transferred by reaching through the slot with a spatula, eye dropper, hypodermic syringe, or other sampling aid. Liquid samples can be sucked into glass bulbs having capillary stems by inserting the stem into the sample while the bulb is outside the dry box where it can be heated and cooled. Sampling equipment such as eye droppers and bulbs which contain air must always be filled xith inert gas before use. Boats or other open sample containers are placed inside a suitable container which is closed before the dry box is opened.

materials, the initial cost might be lorn enough to permit damaged parts to be discarded. Satisfactory use of this box requires some coordination with the ' ~ m p l e makers" to ensure that the sample is furnished in a suitable container. The authors have found that coworkers making sensitive materials are usually aware of the sampling problem and will cooperate. Experience in routine use has shown that the dry box is convenient, useful, efficient. and easily stored. Hygroscopic, n-ater- and oxygen-sensitive, and even pyrophoric organic boron compounds prepared by Buls, Davis, and Thomas [ J . Am. Clzem. SOC. 79, 337 (1957)] have been sampled in it and successfully analyzed. Commercial purified nitrogen (99.901,) was sufficiently dry and inert to be used as the purge gas M ithout further treatment.

Device for Monitoring Absorbance of Column Eluates in a Spectrophotometer J. B. Stark, Roy Teranishi, and G. F. Bailey, Western Utilization Research Branch, Agricultural Research Service, United States Department of Agriculture, Albany 10, Calif. DEVICE

for continuous or manual

A monitoring of chromatographic-col-

Figure 1. Sampling dry box

The prototype model of this box was constructed by using wooden blocks and a perforated section of copper tubing for the bottom inert gas distribution system. However, the wooden blocks absorbed spilled materials and could not be readily cleaned. The recommended design can be subjected to drastic cleaning measures if necessary. Other materials, such as plastics, could also be used for most of the parts involved. While plastics might absorb or be attacked by spilled

umn eluates offers certain advantages in circuit simplicity and ease of operation over others previously described ( I ) . Automatic monitoring avoids circuit complexity by the use of commercially available automatic recycling timing devices of the type used to control reflux ratio in distillation columns. The ease of operation is illustrated by the routiiie manual determination of absorbance a t any set w,ve length for 50 samples in about 30 minutes. Khen desired, the spectrum can be scanned on a. sample before proceeding to the nest,

In Figure 1 the machined aluminum plate, A , 6j/8 X 5'/, X inches, serves as a lid and cell holder to cover the sample compartment. The lower edge of the plate is milled inch in and inch deep (Figure 2). The wooden block, B , fastened to the metal plate with screws, positions the cell in the path of the light beam. The 2-em. path cell, C, is made from a Teflon plug 2.15 em. in diameter with a 4-mm. VOL. 29,

NO. 5 , M A Y 1957

861