US EPA Method 524.2 with the Tekmar Lumin P & T Concentrator and Thermo Scientific™ TRACE™ 1310 and GC/ISQ™ MS system
Applications | 2016 | Teledyne LABSInstrumentation
The analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in drinking water at trace levels is critical for public health and regulatory compliance. US EPA Method 524.2 is the standard approach for these analyses, but the recommended four-minute desorption often transfers excessive water vapor to the GC/MS system, leading to inlet corrosion, column degradation and frequent source maintenance. Enhancing moisture control in purge and trap workflows improves data quality and instrument uptime.
This application note assesses the ability of the Teledyne Tekmar Lumin Purge and Trap Concentrator, equipped with a patented Moisture Control System (MCS), to minimize water carryover when applying US EPA Method 524.2. The study couples Lumin with a Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 GC/ISQ mass spectrometer to verify method performance in drinking water VOC analysis.
Sample preparation included calibration standards from 0.5 to 50 ppb for most compounds, adjusted ranges for ketones (1.25–125 ppb) and t-butanol (2.5–250 ppb). Seven replicate 0.5 ppb samples were used to determine method detection limits (MDLs), accuracy and precision. Key procedural elements:
The system delivered robust performance under Method 524.2 acceptance criteria:
The combination of the Lumin Purge and Trap Concentrator with Moisture Control System and the Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 GC/ISQ MS reliably meets US EPA Method 524.2 requirements. It delivers low MDLs, accurate quantitation and stable chromatography with significantly reduced water interference, streamlining trace VOC analysis in drinking water.
GC/MSD, Purge and Trap, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific, Teledyne LABS
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The analysis of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in drinking water at trace levels is critical for public health and regulatory compliance. US EPA Method 524.2 is the standard approach for these analyses, but the recommended four-minute desorption often transfers excessive water vapor to the GC/MS system, leading to inlet corrosion, column degradation and frequent source maintenance. Enhancing moisture control in purge and trap workflows improves data quality and instrument uptime.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note assesses the ability of the Teledyne Tekmar Lumin Purge and Trap Concentrator, equipped with a patented Moisture Control System (MCS), to minimize water carryover when applying US EPA Method 524.2. The study couples Lumin with a Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 GC/ISQ mass spectrometer to verify method performance in drinking water VOC analysis.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample preparation included calibration standards from 0.5 to 50 ppb for most compounds, adjusted ranges for ketones (1.25–125 ppb) and t-butanol (2.5–250 ppb). Seven replicate 0.5 ppb samples were used to determine method detection limits (MDLs), accuracy and precision. Key procedural elements:
- Four-minute thermal desorption of the analytical trap.
- Lumin P&T’s Moisture Control System to limit water vapor transfer.
- Enhanced trap cooling to shorten cycle time and boost throughput.
Instrumentation Used
- Teledyne Tekmar Lumin Purge and Trap Concentrator with MCS
- Teledyne Tekmar AQUATek 100 autosampler
- Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 GC with Rtx-VMS capillary column (20 m × 0.18 mm, 1 µm film)
- Thermo Scientific ISQ LT mass spectrometer (scan range 35–260 amu)
Main Results and Discussion
The system delivered robust performance under Method 524.2 acceptance criteria:
- Calibration linearity RSD typically below 10%
- MDLs ranging from 0.06 to 0.48 ppb across analytes
- Accuracy between 85% and 135%; precision RSD under 15%
- Minimal chromatographic interference from residual water, even for early-eluting VOCs
- Cycling improvements enabled higher sample throughput over a 12-hour period
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Significantly reduced water vapor load protects GC inlet, column and MS source
- Consistent low detection limits ensure compliance with regulatory limits
- Shorter analytical cycles enhance laboratory efficiency
- Suitable for environmental testing, QA/QC and routine drinking water monitoring
Future Trends and Opportunities
- Integration of real-time moisture monitoring to further optimize water management
- Enhanced automation for continuous online purge and trap analysis
- Expansion to broader matrices such as groundwater and industrial effluents
- Development of even faster desorption and trap refrigeration technologies
Conclusion
The combination of the Lumin Purge and Trap Concentrator with Moisture Control System and the Thermo Scientific TRACE 1310 GC/ISQ MS reliably meets US EPA Method 524.2 requirements. It delivers low MDLs, accurate quantitation and stable chromatography with significantly reduced water interference, streamlining trace VOC analysis in drinking water.
Reference
- Munch JW. US EPA Method 524.2 Measurement of Purgeable Organic Compounds in Water by Capillary Column Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry, Revision 4.1, 1995.
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