Fast Determination of Haloacetic Acids in Drinking Water According to EPA Method 552.3 using Rtx-CLPesticides Columns and Hydrogen Carrier Gas
Applications | 2020 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
The analysis of haloacetic acids (HAAs) in drinking water is crucial due to their status as regulated disinfection byproducts with carcinogenic potential. Monitoring nine HAAs (HAA9) and dalapon helps public health compliance under EPA Method 552.3 and supports water treatment oversight.
This work aimed to evaluate a faster GC method for determining HAA9 and dalapon in water by:
A Shimadzu GC-2030 system with dual split/splitless inlets, dual electron capture detectors (ECD-exceed), and dual autosamplers was employed. Samples were derivatized to methyl esters and extracted into MTBE with a 10× concentration factor. Key instrument details:
The dual-column CLP set achieved a ~33 % reduction in total run time for the last eluting HAA (TBAA) compared with the EPA column set (from ~27 min to ~16 min). Calibration curves (1–50 ppb) showed r2 > 0.995 with 1/A weighting. Calibration accuracy fell within ±21 % at 1 ppb and ±10 % at higher levels, meeting EPA requirements. Solvent blanks displayed no interfering peaks above one-third of the reporting limit. Additionally, the Rtx-CLP column resolved 20 organochlorine pesticides in under 5 min, demonstrating system versatility.
This approach offers:
Advances may include further column chemistry refinements to improve selectivity, integration with automated sample preparation, and extension to other disinfection byproducts. Hydrogen-based methods align with sustainability goals by reducing helium consumption.
The Rtx-CLPesticides/Rtx-CLPesticides2 column set with hydrogen carrier gas provides a reliable, time-saving alternative for EPA Method 552.3 analysis of HAAs and dalapon. The system meets all quality criteria while expanding laboratory flexibility to multiple environmental assays.
GC
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The analysis of haloacetic acids (HAAs) in drinking water is crucial due to their status as regulated disinfection byproducts with carcinogenic potential. Monitoring nine HAAs (HAA9) and dalapon helps public health compliance under EPA Method 552.3 and supports water treatment oversight.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work aimed to evaluate a faster GC method for determining HAA9 and dalapon in water by:
- Replacing conventional Rtx-1701 and Rxi-5Sil-MS columns with Restek Rtx-CLPesticides (primary) and Rtx-CLPesticides2 (confirmation).
- Using hydrogen as a carrier gas to reduce run time and cost.
- Validating performance against EPA Method 552.3 criteria.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
A Shimadzu GC-2030 system with dual split/splitless inlets, dual electron capture detectors (ECD-exceed), and dual autosamplers was employed. Samples were derivatized to methyl esters and extracted into MTBE with a 10× concentration factor. Key instrument details:
- Primary column: Rtx-CLPesticides, 30 m × 0.32 mm × 0.32 µm.
- Confirmation column: Rtx-CLPesticides2, 30 m × 0.32 mm × 0.25 µm.
- Carrier gas: Hydrogen at constant linear velocity (25 cm/s).
- GC temperature program: 35 °C (4 min), ramp 10 °C/min to 250 °C (1 min).
Main Results and Discussion
The dual-column CLP set achieved a ~33 % reduction in total run time for the last eluting HAA (TBAA) compared with the EPA column set (from ~27 min to ~16 min). Calibration curves (1–50 ppb) showed r2 > 0.995 with 1/A weighting. Calibration accuracy fell within ±21 % at 1 ppb and ±10 % at higher levels, meeting EPA requirements. Solvent blanks displayed no interfering peaks above one-third of the reporting limit. Additionally, the Rtx-CLP column resolved 20 organochlorine pesticides in under 5 min, demonstrating system versatility.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
This approach offers:
- Faster throughput and lower per-sample cost due to hydrogen carrier gas and shorter run times.
- Regulatory compliance for HAA5 and HAA9 monitoring.
- Single GC setup adaptable for both HAA and organochlorine pesticide analyses.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advances may include further column chemistry refinements to improve selectivity, integration with automated sample preparation, and extension to other disinfection byproducts. Hydrogen-based methods align with sustainability goals by reducing helium consumption.
Conclusion
The Rtx-CLPesticides/Rtx-CLPesticides2 column set with hydrogen carrier gas provides a reliable, time-saving alternative for EPA Method 552.3 analysis of HAAs and dalapon. The system meets all quality criteria while expanding laboratory flexibility to multiple environmental assays.
References
- EPA Method 552.3: Haloacetic Acids and Dalapon in Drinking Water by GC-ECD, 2003.
- EPA Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule 4 (UCMR4) Fact Sheet, 2016.
- Shimadzu Application News GC-2002, Determination of HAAs with Hydrogen Carrier Gas, 2020.
- EPA Method 608.3: Organochlorine Pesticides and PCBs by GC/HSD, 2014.
- SW-846 Test Method 8081B: Organochlorine Pesticides by GC, EPA, 2007.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Determination of Haloacetic Acids in Drinking Water According to EPA Method 552.3 using Hydrogen Carrier Gas
2020|Shimadzu|Applications
No. SSI-GC-2002 Gas Chromatography No. GC-2002 Determination of Haloacetic Acids in Drinking Water According to EPA Method 552.3 using Hydrogen Carrier Gas ■ Abstract Haloacetic acids (HAAs) are known carcinogens that may occur as disinfection byproducts in drinking water. Currently…
Key words
dalapon, dalaponratio, ratiocdbaa, cdbaabdcaa, bdcaaarea, areabcaa, bcaambaa, mbaatbaa, tbaadbaa, dbaatcaa, tcaamcaa, mcaadcaa, dcaahaas, haashaloacetic, haloaceticcarrier
Determination of Haloacetic Acids (HAA9) and Dalapon in Drinking Water According to EPA Method 552.3 on Dual Columns from a Single Injection
2021|Shimadzu|Applications
No. SSI-GC-2106 Gas Chromatography No. GC-2106 Determination of Haloacetic Acids (HAA9) and Dalapon in Drinking Water According to EPA Method 552.3 on Dual Columns from a Single Injection ■ Abstract Haloacetic acids (HAAs) are known carcinogens that may occur as…
Key words
dalapon, dalaponcdbaa, cdbaaratio, ratiobdcaa, bdcaabcaa, bcaambaa, mbaatbaa, tbaadbaa, dbaatcaa, tcaamcaa, mcaadcaa, dcaaarea, areaacid, acidhaas, haasdbpr
Can we keep the cost of analysis of haloaceticacids (HAAs) down by using an alternative to Helium?
|Shimadzu|Posters
Can we keep the cost of analysis of haloacetic acids (HAAs) down by using an alternative to Helium? Yuan Lin, Nicole Lock and Ruth Marfil-Vega, Shimadzu Scientific Instruments, Columbia, MD, USA Introduction Comparison of hydrogen to helium as carrier gas…
Key words
ratio, ratioarea, areacdbaa, cdbaabdcaa, bdcaabcaa, bcaambaa, mbaatbaa, tbaadbaa, dbaatcaa, tcaamcaa, mcaadcaa, dcaadalapon, dalaponacid, acidhaloacetic, haloacetichelium
Haloacetic Acid Analysis by the Agilent Intuvo 9000 Dual ECD System
2021|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note Environmental Haloacetic Acid Analysis by the Agilent Intuvo 9000 Dual ECD System Authors Jie Zhang and Ian Eisele Agilent Technologies, Inc. Abstract In this application note, the analysis of haloacetic acid methyl esters was performed on the Agilent…
Key words
acid, acidhaa, haahaloacetic, haloaceticdalapon, dalaponwere, wereresponse, responseecd, ecdmethyl, methylcolumns, columnstribromoacetic, tribromoaceticbromochloroacetic, bromochloroaceticdichloroacetic, dichloroaceticbromodichloroacdetic, bromodichloroacdeticdibromoacdtic, dibromoacdticdrinking