Abstract

We identified the antimony species present in a wide variety of plastic samples by X ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) at the Sb L3-edge. The samples contained different concentrations of antimony (Sb), ranging from PET bottles in which Sb compounds are used as catalysts, with concentrations around 300 mg/kg, to electrical equipment in which the element is used as a flame retardant, with concentrations of several tens of thousands of mg/kg. Although the shape of the spectra at the L3-edge is quite similar for all Sb reference materials, we were able to identify antimony glycolate or acetate in PET bottles, bound organic Sb in c-PET trays and senarmontite in electrical materials as the main Sb components. In samples with high Ca content (e.g., electrical objects, some c-PET food trays and textiles) the Ca Ka emission line interferes with the Sb La line by introducing a high background which reduces the signal-to-noise ratio in the Sb XAS spectrum, resulting in noisy and distorted spectra. The element-resolved map on a PET bottle sample revealed both Sb and Ca hot spots of around 10-20 microns in size, with no correlation.

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