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Analysis of Volatile Organic Compounds in Water Using Static Headspace-GC/MS

Applications | 2008 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, HeadSpace, GC/SQ
Industries
Environmental
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


This application addresses the reliable determination of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in water matrices, a critical requirement for environmental monitoring, regulatory compliance, and public health protection. Conventional dynamic purge-and-trap (P&T) techniques offer high sensitivity but suffer from complexity and maintenance issues. Static headspace (SHS) sampling provides greater robustness and lower carryover, but historically lacked the sensitivity needed for sub-ppb level analyses. Recent advances in gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) detectors and electronics now enable SHS methods to achieve regulatory performance while simplifying routine workflows.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study aimed to develop and validate a static headspace–GC/MS method for the quantification of 60 VOCs in water at low-ppt to ppb levels. Key goals included:
  • Maximizing analytical sensitivity through optimized SHS conditions (salt addition, temperature, vial pressure).
  • Leveraging simultaneous scan/SIM acquisition and trace ion detection on a modern GC/MS system.
  • Demonstrating linearity, repeatability, and detection limits compatible with EPA Method 524.2 and EU Directive 98/83/EC.

Methodology


Ten-milliliter water samples were spiked with deuterated internal standards (1,2-dichloroethane-d4, toluene-d8, chlorobenzene-d5 at 800 ng/L) and salted with sodium sulfate to promote headspace partitioning. Samples were equilibrated at 70 °C for 10 minutes under high-shake conditions, then pressurized at 20 kPa to transfer 1 mL of headspace gas through a heated transfer line into the GC inlet (split 1:10). Chromatography employed a 20 m × 0.18 mm × 1 µm DB-624 column with a 25-minute temperature program. The mass spectrometer operated in simultaneous full-scan and selected-ion monitoring (SIM) with trace ion detection, enabling both compound confirmation and ppt-level quantitation.

Used Instrumentation


  • GC/MS: Agilent 7890A GC system with 5975C inert MSD upgraded with Triple Axis Detector and TID mode.
  • Autosampler: Agilent G1888 headspace sampler with 1 mL loop.
  • Column: 20 m × 0.18 mm × 1 µm DB-624 (J&W 121-1324).
  • Headspace vials and liners: Agilent P/N 5182-0837, 5183-4709, and crimp seals P/N 5183-4477.

Results and Discussion


Optimization studies demonstrated:
  • Salt addition increased headspace responses by an average factor of 2.2 (up to 4× for low-response analytes).
  • An equilibration temperature of 70 °C balanced sensitivity across early- and late-eluting VOCs; higher temperatures reduced responses due to increased vial pressure and dilution.
  • A vial pressurization of 20 kPa provided reproducible sample transfer without excessive dilution.
  • Calibration across 45–1 250 ppt yielded correlation coefficients (r²) ≥ 0.99 for 57 of 60 analytes; overall average r²=0.996.
  • Repeatability at 150 ppt showed average RSD of 5.4 %, and intermediate-range RSDs over calibration ranged 10–15 %.
  • Limits of detection (LODs) were typically ≤ 20 ppt (≤ 10 ppt for aromatic and chloroaromatic VOCs; highest LOD = 136 ppt for 1,2-dichloroethane).

Benefits and Practical Applications


The optimized SHS GC/MS method delivers P&T-level sensitivity while preserving the simplicity and robustness of static headspace sampling. Reduced carryover, minimal maintenance, and fast cycle times suit high-throughput environmental and drinking water testing laboratories. Simultaneous scan/SIM acquisition allows trace-level quantitation and spectral confirmation in a single run, improving data confidence and regulatory compliance.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Emerging advances that can further enhance SHS VOC analysis include:
  • Faster GC column technologies and ultra-fast temperature programming for sub-10-minute total run times.
  • Automated sample preparation workflows with integrated salt dosing and dilution controls.
  • High-resolution MS and data-independent acquisition modes for expanded non-target screening.
  • AI-driven data processing for automated peak deconvolution, identification, and quantitation.
  • Portable or miniaturized GC/MS systems for on-site environmental monitoring and rapid field assessments.

Conclusion


This work demonstrates that a state-of-the-art SHS GC/MS configuration with trace ion detection can reliably quantify a broad suite of VOCs in water at sub-ppb levels. The method meets or exceeds key regulatory requirements while offering enhanced robustness and streamlined operation compared to dynamic purge-and-trap approaches.

Reference


  • EPA Method 524.2 for VOC analysis in water
  • EU Directive 98/83/EC on drinking water quality
  • Agilent Technologies Application Note 5990-3285EN, December 2008

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