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Carbon Adsorbents: Physical Characteristics and Selection Guide

The following information is gathered to assist chemists and method developers in locating the proper specialty carbon adsorbent for their use. Additional assistance can be obtained by contacting our Technical Service group at techservice@sial.com.

Physical Characteristics of our Specialty Carbon Adsorbents

To view the approximate surface area, pore volume, pore diameter, micropore diameter, and free fall density for each of our specialty carbon adsorbents, simply click the graphic below. Also indicated is the type of adsorbent (CMS, SGPC, GCB, etc.), the shape (spherical or granular), and whether it is scalable. Included are all our Carboxen®, Carbosieve®, Graphsphere™, Carbotrap®, and Carbopack™ adsorbents. Additional assistance can be obtained by contacting our Technical Service group.

Adsorbent Cross-Reference Guide

Use this easy-to-use cross-reference table to find our recommendations for non-Supelco adsorbents, including some that are discontinued.

AdsorbentSupelco Recommendation
Ambersorb 347Carboxen 564
Ambersorb 563Carboxen 563
Ambersorb 572Carboxen 572
Anasorb CMSCarboxen 564, Carboxen 1000, Carbosieve S-III
Anasorb CSCCoconut charcoal
Anasorb GCB1Carbotrap B, Carbopack B
Anasorb GCB2Carbotrap C, Carbopack C
Anasorb 708Chromosorb 1081
Anasorb 727Amberlite XAD-4
Anasorb 747Carboxen 564, Carboxen 1000, Carbosieve S-III
CarboBlack BCarbotrap B, Carbopack B
CarboBlack CCarbotrap C, Carbopack C
Carbograph 1Carbotrap B, Carbopack B
Carbograph 2Carbotrap C, Carbopack C
Carbograph 3Carbotrap F, Carbopack F
Carbograph 4Carbopack Z
Carbograph 5Carbotrap X, Carbopack X
CarbosphereCarboxen 1000
Graphpac-GCCarbotrap B, Carbopack B
PurosieveCarboxen 1000
SpherocarbCarboxen 1000
Tenax GCTenax TA1
1 Supelco offers this adsorbent, but is not the manufacturer.

Carbon Adsorbent Selection Based on Analyte Size

To assist with the selection of our specialty carbon adsorbents, this table below lists some general guidelines based on analyte size. For multi-bed tubes, use the weaker adsorbent in front of the stronger adsorbent to protect it (this will keep analytes from adsorbing on a bed too strong, resulting in poor analyte release during desorption). For example, use Carbotrap C in front of Carbotrap B.

Relative Analyte Size1Adsorptive
Strength
Recommended Adsorbents (listed highest to lowest surface area)
C20+Weakest
to 
Strongest
Carbotrap F, Carbopack F
C12-C20Carbotrap C, Carbopack C
C9-C14Carbotrap Y, Carbopack Y
C5-C12Graphsphere 2027, Graphsphere 2029, Carbotrap B, Carbopack B, Graphsphere 2016, Graphsphere 2017
C3-C9Carbotrap X, Carbopack X, Carbopack Z
C2-C5Carboxen 1012, Carboxen 1034, Carboxen 1000, Carboxen 1008, Carboxen 1026, Carbosieve G, Carboxen 1005, Carboxen 572, Carbosieve S-II, Carboxen 1003, Carbosieve S-III, Carboxen 1032, Carboxen 1030, Carboxen 1006, Carboxen 1018, Carboxen 1010, Carboxen 1021, Carboxen 563, Carboxen 1001, Carboxen 569, Carboxen 1033, Carboxen 564
1 Analyte size relative to n-alkanes. Consider all atoms, not just carbon. For example, even though 1,2-dichloroethane is a C2, the two chlorine atoms give it a relative size between C4 and C5.

A Tool for Selecting an Adsorbent for Thermal Desorption Applications

Detailed adsorption/desorption characteristics of fifteen of our specialty carbons plus nine other adsorbents, depicted in twenty-four easy-to-follow color-coded tables, are shown in A Tool for Selecting an Adsorbent for Thermal Desorption Applications (T402025 HTA). To download your no-charge copy of this Technical Report, simply click the graphic of the report cover.

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