A New Solution for Trace-Level Analysis of 1,4-Dioxane in Drinking Water
Applications | 2012 | RestekInstrumentation
Concerns over the carcinogenic potential of 1,4-dioxane in drinking water have driven regulatory agencies to lower acceptable levels to sub-ppb concentrations. Conventional GC injection techniques often lack the sensitivity required to detect this contaminant at parts-per-trillion levels. Concurrent Solvent Recondensation–Large Volume Splitless Injection (CSR-LVSI) using an unmodified splitless inlet provides a cost-effective approach to achieve ultra-trace detection without specialized hardware.
The primary goal was to adapt CSR-LVSI to a standard Agilent-style split/splitless GC inlet and demonstrate reliable quantification of 1,4-dioxane down to 5.0 ppt in drinking water. Key steps included solid-phase extraction (SPE) cleanup, large-volume (10 µL) injection with glass wool liners, and use of a retention gap to focus analytes prior to separation.
Samples were processed with Resprep SPE cartridges packed with activated charcoal to remove matrix interferences. A 10 µL extract was injected rapidly into a hot inlet containing a Restek Premium liner with quartz wool, which acts as a solvent reservoir. High inlet temperature caused near-instant vaporization and a pressure surge that transferred sample onto a deactivated Rxi® retention gap at an oven temperature below the solvent boiling point. Solvent recondensation in the gap prevented backflash and concentrated analytes into a narrow band. The oven was then ramped to elute and separate components on an Rxi®-624Sil MS analytical column.
Comparison with standard 1 µL injections showed equivalent peak areas at 500 pg on-column, confirming no analyte loss with CSR-LVSI. Peak shapes were markedly improved, with narrow, symmetrical peaks enhancing integration accuracy. Calibration was linear over 5–10,000 pg on-column (R2 ≥ 0.9996). Extracted water samples fortified at 5 ppt (5 pg on-column) produced signal-to-noise ratios ≥ 16 and clear separation of the quantitation ion (m/z 88) and confirmation ion (m/z 58) from coextracted interferences. Recoveries for 1,4-dioxane ranged from 80–100% and surrogate recoveries from 88–125%. The high thermal stability of the Rxi®-624Sil MS column (up to 320 °C) facilitated post-run bake-out to minimize carryover.
CSR-LVSI implemented on an unmodified splitless GC inlet delivers a robust, sensitive method for trace-level 1,4-dioxane analysis in drinking water. The approach achieves linear quantification down to 5 ppt, maintains peak integrity, and meets stringent regulatory requirements without specialized injection hardware.
GC/MSD, GC/SQ, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, Restek
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Concerns over the carcinogenic potential of 1,4-dioxane in drinking water have driven regulatory agencies to lower acceptable levels to sub-ppb concentrations. Conventional GC injection techniques often lack the sensitivity required to detect this contaminant at parts-per-trillion levels. Concurrent Solvent Recondensation–Large Volume Splitless Injection (CSR-LVSI) using an unmodified splitless inlet provides a cost-effective approach to achieve ultra-trace detection without specialized hardware.
Study Objectives and Overview
The primary goal was to adapt CSR-LVSI to a standard Agilent-style split/splitless GC inlet and demonstrate reliable quantification of 1,4-dioxane down to 5.0 ppt in drinking water. Key steps included solid-phase extraction (SPE) cleanup, large-volume (10 µL) injection with glass wool liners, and use of a retention gap to focus analytes prior to separation.
Methodology
Samples were processed with Resprep SPE cartridges packed with activated charcoal to remove matrix interferences. A 10 µL extract was injected rapidly into a hot inlet containing a Restek Premium liner with quartz wool, which acts as a solvent reservoir. High inlet temperature caused near-instant vaporization and a pressure surge that transferred sample onto a deactivated Rxi® retention gap at an oven temperature below the solvent boiling point. Solvent recondensation in the gap prevented backflash and concentrated analytes into a narrow band. The oven was then ramped to elute and separate components on an Rxi®-624Sil MS analytical column.
Instrumentation
- Gas chromatograph: Agilent 7890A GC with 5975C MSD
- Inlet liner: Restek Premium 4.0 mm ID single taper with quartz wool
- Retention gap: 5 m Rxi® guard column, 0.25 mm ID
- Analytical column: 30 m Rxi®-624Sil MS, 0.25 mm ID, 1.40 µm film
- Connectors: Universal Press-Tight® fittings
Key Results and Discussion
Comparison with standard 1 µL injections showed equivalent peak areas at 500 pg on-column, confirming no analyte loss with CSR-LVSI. Peak shapes were markedly improved, with narrow, symmetrical peaks enhancing integration accuracy. Calibration was linear over 5–10,000 pg on-column (R2 ≥ 0.9996). Extracted water samples fortified at 5 ppt (5 pg on-column) produced signal-to-noise ratios ≥ 16 and clear separation of the quantitation ion (m/z 88) and confirmation ion (m/z 58) from coextracted interferences. Recoveries for 1,4-dioxane ranged from 80–100% and surrogate recoveries from 88–125%. The high thermal stability of the Rxi®-624Sil MS column (up to 320 °C) facilitated post-run bake-out to minimize carryover.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Enables ppt-level detection of volatile contaminants in clean matrices without PTV inlets
- Utilizes existing splitless GC hardware, reducing capital investment
- Improves quantitative accuracy through increased analyte load and focused injection bands
- Compatible with regulatory monitoring programs (e.g., UCMR3, EPA Method 522)
Future Trends and Applications
- Extension of CSR-LVSI to other low-boiling water contaminants
- Integration with automated SPE systems for higher throughput
- Adaptation to a wider range of GC platforms and inlet designs
- Coupling with high-resolution MS to enhance selectivity in complex matrices
Conclusion
CSR-LVSI implemented on an unmodified splitless GC inlet delivers a robust, sensitive method for trace-level 1,4-dioxane analysis in drinking water. The approach achieves linear quantification down to 5 ppt, maintains peak integrity, and meets stringent regulatory requirements without specialized injection hardware.
References
- U.S. EPA, Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule 3, 2012.
- Grimmett P., Munch J., J. Chromatogr. Sci. 47 (2009) 31.
- Magni P., Porzano T., J. Sep. Sci. 26 (2003) 1491.
- US Patent 6,955,709 B2.
- Cochran J., ChromaBLOGraphy, Restek Corp. 2011.
- EPA Method 522, 2008.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Lowering Detection Limits for 1,4-Dioxane in Drinking Water Using Large Volume Injection in an Unmodified Splitless GC Inlet
2012|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Environmental Applications Lowering Detection Limits for 1,4-Dioxane in Drinking Water Using Large Volume Injection in an Unmodified Splitless GC Inlet By Chris Rattray, Jack Cochran, and Chris English Abstract Concurrent solvent recondensation–large volume splitless injection (CSR-LVSI) for gas chromatography typically…
Key words
eic, eicmin, minlvsi, lvsicsr, csrpeaks, peaksdrinking, drinkingsplitless, splitlessunmodified, unmodifiedbottled, bottledrecondensation, recondensationwater, watertime, timeconcurrent, concurrentbfb, bfbreagent
Combined Determination of 1,4-Dioxane and Nitrosamine Contaminants in Drinking Water
2014|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Combined Determination of 1,4-Dioxane and Nitrosamine Contaminants in Drinking Water Using a Single SPE Cartridge and Concurrent Solvent Recondensation– Large Volume Splitless Injection (CSR-LVSI) With EI GC-MS By Chris Rattray and Jack Cochran Abstract Global concern over the carcinogenic potential…
Key words
nitrosodi, nitrosodiical, icalbutylamine, butylaminepropylamine, propylaminenitrosomethylethylamine, nitrosomethylethylaminenitrosomorpholine, nitrosomorpholinenitrosopyrrolidine, nitrosopyrrolidinenitrosopiperidine, nitrosopiperidinenitrosodiethylamine, nitrosodiethylaminethf, thflevel, levelnitrosodimethylamine, nitrosodimethylaminebfb, bfbsge, sgedichloromethane
Rxi®-5Sil MS Columns
2015|Restek|Brochures and specifications
Rxi®-5Sil MS Columns Rugged, Low-Bleed Performance for Challenging GC-MS Work Part of the Rxi® GC Column Family • Accurate MS data • The right results fast • Maximize instrument uptime 174 201 Time (s) 892 894 896 898 900 902…
Key words
gcs, gcsinlets, inletssplitless, splitlessane, anedibenzodioxins, dibenzodioxinsbenzo, benzoepa, epaequipped, equippedcarcinog, carcinoghxcdfs, hxcdfspecdds, pecddscolumn, columnrestek, restekenic, enicpotentia
Large Volume Splitless Injection Using an Unmodified Split/Splitless Inlet and GC-TOFMS for Pesticides and Brominated Flame Retardants
2011|Restek|Applications
Environmental Applications Large Volume Splitless Injection Using an Unmodified Split/Splitless Inlet and GC-TOFMS for Pesticides and Brominated Flame Retardants By Michelle Misselwitz and Jack Cochran Abstract Large volume splitless injection for gas chromatography typically requires a special injection port, for…
Key words
lvsi, lvsicsr, csrcaliper, caliperkepone, keponeextract, extractconcentration, concentrationlimits, limitsmirex, mirexsplitless, splitlessacquisition, acquisitionspring, springinjection, injectionatrazine, atrazineppt, pptsample