Laboratory for analysis and expertise

CHONS training: analyzing and characterizing key elements

Understanding the challenges of CHONS training applied to industrial materials

In industry, CHONS analysis makes it possible to identify and quantify the elements carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur in order to better understand the composition of a material, polymer, formulation, or processed product. This training meets the needs of formulators, R&D teams, quality departments, technical purchasing teams, and materials experts who want to secure supplier qualification, compare two materials, support a de-formulation study, or interpret analytical discrepancies. It naturally fits into materials expertise, competitive analysis, and reverse engineering approaches, alongside other chemical and structural characterization methods.

Meeting the needs of comparison, control, and expertise

The training is particularly well suited when a company needs to compare two polymers, verify the consistency of raw materials, investigate a non-conformity, document a supplier variation, or deepen its understanding of a formulation. CHONS analysis helps objectify differences in overall composition and guide investigations when discrepancies are observed between references, batches, or material fragments.

Mastering measurement, sample preparation, and the method’s limitations

The program covers the principle of the CHONS analyzer, the types of matrices that are compatible, sample preparation, parameters influencing the measurement, result processing, and key metrological considerations. Participants learn how to interpret an elemental result in its industrial context, distinguish a significant variation from simple analytical noise, and formulate a conclusion that can be used in production, quality, or R&D.

Benefit from an application-oriented industrial approach

Filab’s added value lies in its ability to connect analytical theory with real-world industrial use cases. The training is designed to make results directly actionable in a development, process optimization, materials expertise, or technical decision-validation context. Discussions are based on concrete issues: polymer comparison, additive understanding, mineral filler studies, interpretation of batch-to-batch differences, or supplier investigations.

Training with an expert laboratory in chemical and materials characterization

The laboratory supports industrial companies in building skills in elemental analysis and in cross-interpreting results from complementary techniques. The training is not limited to how a CHONS analyzer works: it also covers sample preparation, the method’s limitations, critical reading of results, and how to combine it with other analytical tools useful for understanding a formulation as a whole. Depending on the objective, participants may also be introduced to related approaches in Formation Lc Msms Lc Ms or to broader advanced characterization issues.

Linking CHONS analysis to a more complete analytical strategy

In many cases, CHONS analysis is best considered alongside other techniques. A material study may thus include qualitative screening for volatile organic additives by HS-GC/MS, semi-volatile compounds by GC/MS, and non-volatile compounds by LC-HRMS, morphological observation of fillers, elemental identification of mineral fillers such as Ti, Al, Ca, or Si, as well as assessment of the mass fraction of mineral fillers. This logic of analytical complementarity is at the heart of the training.

Discovering complementary techniques useful for characterization

To move toward more complete characterization, the training may include an introduction to techniques such as FTIR, pyrolysis-GC/MS, TGA, SEM-EDX, gravimetry, HS-GC/MS, GC/MS, and LC-HRMS. These approaches make it possible, for example, to study chain fragments, search for organic additives such as antioxidants, plasticizers, or UV stabilizers, measure a decomposition profile, or characterize mineral fillers and their morphology. For related analytical training needs, it is also possible to explore our Formation Microplastiques or our Formation Ich Q6B.

Rely on a recognized analytical environment

Filab operates within a structured quality framework, with a strong culture of chemical, materials, and R&D support characterization. The laboratory has an analytical environment covering in particular elemental, organic, thermal, surface, and morphological analysis. This cross-disciplinary approach makes it possible to offer training that is useful, realistic, and aligned with the constraints of industrial companies seeking reliable, interpretable, and actionable data.

Define the need, customize the program, schedule the session

Setting up a training course starts with analyzing your needs: the type of materials studied, the participants’ level, operational objectives, and the techniques already used in-house. The program can then be adjusted to focus on the fundamentals of CHONS analysis, advanced interpretation, material comparison, integration with organic additive analysis, or understanding mineral fillers. To move forward efficiently: define your objectives, share your use cases, schedule the session, train your teams, and secure your analytical interpretations.

Frequently asked questions

How can I train my teams in CHONS analysis to identify and characterize the key elements of a material?

A CHONS training course provides the theoretical and practical foundations needed to properly use elemental analysis, choose the right samples, interpret composition differences, and connect the results to a concrete industrial issue: material control, batch comparison, formulation expertise, or support for supplier qualification.

What industrial problems can be solved with CHONS analysis training?

The training helps address issues related to material comparison, formulation understanding, quality control, post-incident expertise, and supplier qualification. It also helps determine when CHONS analysis is sufficient and when it should be supplemented with organic, thermal, or morphological analysis.

What technical means and concepts are covered during the training?

The training covers both how CHONS analysis works, sample preparation, result interpretation, and complementary techniques useful for characterizing a material more broadly, especially in polymers and complex formulations.

Why choose Filab to train my teams in CHONS analysis?

Choosing Filab means training your teams with a laboratory experienced in real industrial challenges, able to combine elemental analysis, materials expertise, and multi-technique interpretation to turn analytical results into operational decisions.

How do I get started with CHONS training tailored to my industrial needs?

To get started, simply define the nature of your samples, the expected level, and your business objectives. A customized training course can then be designed to meet your control, development, expertise, or supplier qualification needs.
The filab advantages
A highly qualified team
A highly qualified team
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
Responsiveness in responding to and processing requests
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
A COFRAC ISO 17025 accredited laboratory
(Staves available on www.cofrac.com - Accreditation number: 1-1793)
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
A complete analytical facility of 5,200m²
Tailor-made support
Tailor-made support
Video debriefing available with the expert
Video debriefing available with the expert
Thomas ROUSSEAU Scientific and Technical Director
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