Improvements for the analysis of volatile (VOC) and very volatile (VVOC) organic compounds using In-Tube Extraction- Dynamic Headspace (ITEX-DHS) and cryogen-free refocusing
Applications | 2024 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Volatile and very volatile organic compounds (VOCs and VVOCs) in water represent critical environmental and public health concerns. Regulatory agencies worldwide set strict limits on these contaminants in drinking and surface water. Achieving the required trace-level detection demands efficient sample enrichment and high chromatographic performance.
The study demonstrates how combining In-Tube Extraction–Dynamic Headspace (ITEX-DHS) with cryogen-free refocusing in a Programmed Temperature Vaporizer (PTV) injector can push detection limits for a broad range of VOCs and VVOCs in water. The goal is to simplify instrumentation while delivering sub-ppt sensitivity, high precision, and compliance with water quality regulations.
Combining ITEX-DHS dynamic headspace extraction with cryogen-free PTV refocusing delivers a streamlined, automated method for trace-level VOC and VVOC analysis in water. The approach achieves sub-ppt detection limits, excellent precision, and minimal carryover, all while reducing hardware complexity and maintaining high chromatographic quality.
HeadSpace, SPME, GC/MSD, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the topic
Volatile and very volatile organic compounds (VOCs and VVOCs) in water represent critical environmental and public health concerns. Regulatory agencies worldwide set strict limits on these contaminants in drinking and surface water. Achieving the required trace-level detection demands efficient sample enrichment and high chromatographic performance.
Study objectives and overview
The study demonstrates how combining In-Tube Extraction–Dynamic Headspace (ITEX-DHS) with cryogen-free refocusing in a Programmed Temperature Vaporizer (PTV) injector can push detection limits for a broad range of VOCs and VVOCs in water. The goal is to simplify instrumentation while delivering sub-ppt sensitivity, high precision, and compliance with water quality regulations.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Sample preparation: Water samples spiked with VOC standards (0.005–10 µg/L) and internal standards (1-bromo-2-chloroethane, fluorobenzene), salted at 55 g/L NaCl.
- ITEX-DHS extraction: Tenax TA trap packed in a gas-tight syringe; 40 strokes at 35 °C to enrich headspace volatiles.
- Cryogen-free refocusing: Use of a packed Tenax TA liner inside the iConnect PTV injector to concentrate analytes before column transfer.
- GC-MS analysis: Thermo Scientific TRACE 1610 GC equipped with a TraceGOLD TG-624SilMS column (60 m × 0.25 mm, 1.4 µm), coupled to an ISQ 7610 single quadrupole MS in timed SIM mode.
- Data handling: Fully automated workflow and reporting in Chromeleon CDS 7.3, compliant with FDA Title 21 CFR Part 11.
Main results and discussion
- Limits of detection in the sub-ppt range achieved for most analytes, including vinyl chloride and other VVOCs.
- Excellent linearity (R² ≥ 0.995) across four orders of magnitude (0.005–10 µg/L).
- High precision: RSD < 5% without internal standards; overall RSD improved to ~ 2.7% using internal standards.
- Carryover below 0.03% after 10 µg/L injections, ensuring no sample memory effects.
- Cryogen-free PTV refocusing notably sharpened peaks and boosted signal-to-noise for low-boiling compounds without freezing moisture.
Benefits and practical applications
- Automated, high-throughput workflow suitable for environmental monitoring, food safety, and forensic analysis.
- Flexible enrichment scales from trace to higher concentrations without complex cryogenic devices.
- Robust performance meeting stringent regulatory requirements for drinking water quality.
Future trends and potential applications
- Integration of advanced ion sources (e.g., AEI ExtractaBrite) for further sensitivity enhancements.
- Extension of ITEX-DHS to other matrices (soil, biological samples) with custom sorbent traps.
- Coupling with high-resolution mass spectrometry for comprehensive volatile screening.
- Adoption of cryogen-free refocusing in other sample introduction modes to streamline workflows.
Conclusion
Combining ITEX-DHS dynamic headspace extraction with cryogen-free PTV refocusing delivers a streamlined, automated method for trace-level VOC and VVOC analysis in water. The approach achieves sub-ppt detection limits, excellent precision, and minimal carryover, all while reducing hardware complexity and maintaining high chromatographic quality.
References
- United States Environmental Protection Agency. Technical Overview of Volatile Organic Compounds. EPA; 2020.
- United States Environmental Protection Agency. Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA). EPA; 1974.
- Council of the European Union. Directive 2008/105/EC on environmental quality standards in the field of water policy. Official Journal of the EU; 2008.
- Extension Foundation. Drinking Water Contaminant—Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs). Extension Foundation; 2017.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. In-Tube Extraction Dynamic Headspace (ITEX-DHS) sampling technique coupled to GC-MS for odorants in water. Application Note 73471; 2023.
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