Measurement of Volatile Organic Compounds in Water by Headspace GC-MS with Nitrogen Carrier Gas
Applications | 2025 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in water are regulated due to their potential health hazards. Rapid, sensitive, and cost-effective analytical methods are vital for environmental monitoring and quality control laboratories.
This work evaluates a headspace GC-MS approach using nitrogen as the carrier gas combined with trap-mode sampling to quantify a suite of VOCs in water. The aim is to overcome the sensitivity loss inherent to nitrogen and demonstrate reliable performance across a broad concentration range.
Sample Preparation
Detection limits reached 0.2 µg/L for target VOCs and 5 µg/L for 1,4-dioxane. Total ion and extracted ion chromatograms confirmed clear peak separation. Calibration curves exhibited high linearity (R² > 0.997) or well-fitted quadratic behavior where required. Repeatability was <5 % RSD and accuracy within ±20 %. Signal-to-noise ratios exceeded 10 for all analytes.
Use of nitrogen carrier gas significantly reduces operating costs and supply constraints compared to helium. Trap-mode headspace sampling restores sensitivity, enabling single-run analysis of low and high boiling point VOCs. The method suits regulatory compliance testing, environmental surveillance, and industrial QA/QC.
Advances may include alternative trap sorbents for broader compound coverage, integration with high-resolution or tandem mass spectrometry for enhanced selectivity, and automation for high-throughput laboratories. Expanding this approach to other matrices such as soils or complex beverages could further its utility.
Trap-mode headspace GC-MS with nitrogen carrier gas on Shimadzu GCMS-QP2050 and HS-20 NX delivers sensitive, accurate VOC analysis in water. The procedure offers a cost-effective alternative to helium-based methods without sacrificing performance.
HeadSpace, GC/MSD, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in water are regulated due to their potential health hazards. Rapid, sensitive, and cost-effective analytical methods are vital for environmental monitoring and quality control laboratories.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work evaluates a headspace GC-MS approach using nitrogen as the carrier gas combined with trap-mode sampling to quantify a suite of VOCs in water. The aim is to overcome the sensitivity loss inherent to nitrogen and demonstrate reliable performance across a broad concentration range.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Preparation
- Preparation of calibration standards by diluting a VOC mixture in methanol and spiking with internal standards (1,4-dioxane-d8, fluorobenzene, p-bromofluorobenzene).
- Salt addition (3 g NaCl) and equilibration in 20 mL headspace vials with 10 mL water samples.
- HS-20 NX in trap mode with Tenax TA at 25 °C trapping and 230 °C desorption.
- Vial heating at 70 °C for 30 min, dry purge, and multi-injection to concentrate analytes.
- Shimadzu GCMS-QP2050 with nitrogen carrier gas at constant linear velocity (23.7 cm/s).
- InertCap AQUATIC column (60 m × 0.25 mm i.d., 1 µm); temperature program from 40 °C to 200 °C.
- Electron impact MS in selected ion monitoring (SIM) mode with optimized ion source and interface temperatures (200 °C).
Main Results and Discussion
Detection limits reached 0.2 µg/L for target VOCs and 5 µg/L for 1,4-dioxane. Total ion and extracted ion chromatograms confirmed clear peak separation. Calibration curves exhibited high linearity (R² > 0.997) or well-fitted quadratic behavior where required. Repeatability was <5 % RSD and accuracy within ±20 %. Signal-to-noise ratios exceeded 10 for all analytes.
Benefits and Practical Applications
Use of nitrogen carrier gas significantly reduces operating costs and supply constraints compared to helium. Trap-mode headspace sampling restores sensitivity, enabling single-run analysis of low and high boiling point VOCs. The method suits regulatory compliance testing, environmental surveillance, and industrial QA/QC.
Future Trends and Applications
Advances may include alternative trap sorbents for broader compound coverage, integration with high-resolution or tandem mass spectrometry for enhanced selectivity, and automation for high-throughput laboratories. Expanding this approach to other matrices such as soils or complex beverages could further its utility.
Conclusion
Trap-mode headspace GC-MS with nitrogen carrier gas on Shimadzu GCMS-QP2050 and HS-20 NX delivers sensitive, accurate VOC analysis in water. The procedure offers a cost-effective alternative to helium-based methods without sacrificing performance.
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