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Determination of t-Butyl Methyl Ether (MTBE) in Water and Soil

Applications | 2019 | PerkinElmerInstrumentation
GC, HeadSpace
Industries
Environmental
Manufacturer
PerkinElmer

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The gasoline additive t-Butyl methyl ether (MTBE) has been widely adopted as an octane enhancer and oxygenate to reduce carbon monoxide and support regulatory emissions standards. However, its high solubility, slow biodegradation and low odor threshold pose significant risks for groundwater and soil contamination even at trace levels. Accurate quantification of MTBE in environmental samples is essential to ensure safe drinking water and to guide remediation efforts.

Objectives and Overview of the Study


  • Establish a robust headspace gas chromatography method with flame ionization detection for MTBE in water and soil.
  • Achieve sensitive and reliable quantification across a broad concentration range.
  • Demonstrate method performance in real matrices: tap water, rainwater and garden soil.


Methodology and Instrumentation


Samples were prepared by diluting 3.0 g of soil in 20 mL of pure water, stirring for two hours, and isolating 5 mL of supernatant into headspace vials. Tap water and freshly collected rainwater were analyzed directly after spiking. Calibration standards spanning 0.48 to 77.02 µg/L were prepared in 5 mL water volumes. Method precision and detection limits were evaluated by replicate injections.

Instrumentation included a PerkinElmer Clarus 690 GC/FID coupled to a TurboMatrix HS-40 headspace trap. Key operational parameters comprised a trap temperature cycle from 40 °C to 280 °C, sample thermostatting at 30 min, helium carrier gas at 35 psi, and an Elite-624 capillary column (60 m × 0.25 mm × 1.4 µm). The GC oven ramped from 35 °C to 105 °C at 10 °C/min, then to 180 °C at 20 °C/min, with FID gases set at 40 mL/min hydrogen and 400 mL/min air.

Key Results and Discussion


Linear calibration was demonstrated over the 0.48–77.02 µg/L range with correlation coefficients above 0.9996. The method detection limit was determined as 0.29 µg/L. Repeatability assessed by area RSD was 4.01% and retention time precision was 0.07%. Recoveries for MTBE spiked samples were 96.2% in tap water, 90.5% in rainwater and 87.6% in soil matrix, confirming method applicability across diverse environmental samples.

Benefits and Practical Applications


This headspace GC/FID approach offers rapid, sensitive and reproducible analysis of MTBE at ultratrace levels. Its minimal sample preparation and turnkey instrumentation make it suitable for routine monitoring of drinking water, groundwater and contaminated soils in environmental laboratories and regulatory settings.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Advances may include integration of mass spectrometric detection for enhanced selectivity, miniaturized headspace traps for field-deployable systems, and expanded application to other fuel oxygenates and volatile contaminants. Data analytics and automation could further streamline high-throughput environmental surveillance.

Conclusion


The validated method employing the PerkinElmer Clarus 690 GC/FID with TurboMatrix HS-40 trap provides a reliable platform for quantitative determination of MTBE in water and soil. High linearity, low detection limits and consistent recoveries support its adoption for environmental compliance and contamination assessment.

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