GC/HPLC Analyses of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water: US EPA Procedures
Guides | 1996 | MerckInstrumentation
Ensuring safe drinking water requires sensitive and accurate detection of trace organic contaminants. The US EPA Series 500 methods establish standardized protocols for monitoring a broad range of volatile and nonvolatile organics, supporting regulatory compliance and public health protection.
This whitepaper reviews the US EPA’s Series 500 procedures for analyzing organic compounds in drinking water by gas and liquid chromatography. It summarizes sample preparation techniques, chromatographic separations, detection modes, and demonstrated performance using Supelco and OI Analytical products.
Sample preparation addresses both volatile and nonvolatile analytes:
Chromatographic separation and detection include:
Chromatographic data demonstrate efficient separation of 60 EPA-regulated purgeable organics with VOCOL columns and GC/MS, complete recovery of volatile priority pollutants at low ppb levels, and reliable quantitation of pesticides, PCBs, phthalates, phthalic and adipic esters, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons across diverse matrices. Alternative adsorbents and wide bore columns improved desorption efficiency, reduced background, and eliminated cryofocusing requirements.
The Series 500 methods provide laboratories with robust, validated workflows for routine monitoring of drinking water contaminants. The flexibility to use alternative sorbents, paired with high-temperature traps and inert low-bleed columns, enhances throughput, reduces carryover, and meets stringent quality control criteria.
Emerging developments include:
US EPA Series 500 procedures, supported by modern chromatographic technology and sample preparation media, deliver precise, reproducible analyses of a wide spectrum of organic contaminants in drinking water. Continuous innovations in adsorbents, columns, and detectors will further improve laboratory efficiency and detection capabilities.
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerMerck
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Ensuring safe drinking water requires sensitive and accurate detection of trace organic contaminants. The US EPA Series 500 methods establish standardized protocols for monitoring a broad range of volatile and nonvolatile organics, supporting regulatory compliance and public health protection.
Study Objectives and Overview
This whitepaper reviews the US EPA’s Series 500 procedures for analyzing organic compounds in drinking water by gas and liquid chromatography. It summarizes sample preparation techniques, chromatographic separations, detection modes, and demonstrated performance using Supelco and OI Analytical products.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample preparation addresses both volatile and nonvolatile analytes:
- Purge-and-trap concentration on carbon adsorbent traps (e.g. VOCARB™ 4000) followed by thermal desorption.
- Solid phase extraction (SPE) with C18 or ion-exchange disks (ENVI™-18, ENVI-8) for semi-volatiles, pesticides, herbicides, and other synthetic organics.
- Liquid–liquid extraction for organohalide pesticides and PCBs using methylene chloride or hexane.
Chromatographic separation and detection include:
- Capillary GC columns: VOCOL™ (wide bore for VOCs), PTE™-5, SPB™-1, SPB™-1701, SPB™-210, SPB™-2401.
- HPLC columns: C18 reversed-phase (SUPELCOSIL™ LC-18), PAH-selective phases, ion-exchange columns for glyphosate.
- Detectors: FID, ECD, nitrogen-phosphorus or thermionic (TSD), photoionization (PID) and electrolytic conductivity (ELCD) in tandem, mass spectrometry (GC/MS), and diode array UV for HPLC.
- Instrumentation examples: OI Analytical Model 4460A/4440 purge-trap with tandem PID/ELCD, Tekmar LCS 2000, conventional GC/MS and GC/ECD systems.
Main Results and Discussion
Chromatographic data demonstrate efficient separation of 60 EPA-regulated purgeable organics with VOCOL columns and GC/MS, complete recovery of volatile priority pollutants at low ppb levels, and reliable quantitation of pesticides, PCBs, phthalates, phthalic and adipic esters, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons across diverse matrices. Alternative adsorbents and wide bore columns improved desorption efficiency, reduced background, and eliminated cryofocusing requirements.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The Series 500 methods provide laboratories with robust, validated workflows for routine monitoring of drinking water contaminants. The flexibility to use alternative sorbents, paired with high-temperature traps and inert low-bleed columns, enhances throughput, reduces carryover, and meets stringent quality control criteria.
Future Trends and Applications
Emerging developments include:
- Tailored adsorbent materials and microfabricated traps for broader analyte coverage.
- Integration of fast GC and tandem MS/MS for ultra-trace analysis.
- Automated on-line SPE-GC and GC×GC-TOF for comprehensive screening.
- Green sample preparation techniques minimizing solvent use.
Conclusion
US EPA Series 500 procedures, supported by modern chromatographic technology and sample preparation media, deliver precise, reproducible analyses of a wide spectrum of organic contaminants in drinking water. Continuous innovations in adsorbents, columns, and detectors will further improve laboratory efficiency and detection capabilities.
References
- [1] US EPA Methods for the Determination of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water, Series 500, including Methods 502.2, 524.2, 525, 531.1, 547, 550, 551. National Technical Information Service, PB 92-207703.
- [2] Technical Note for Drinking Water Methodology Amendments. US Department of Commerce NTIS Document PB95-104766.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Bulletin 865B GC/HPLC Analyses of Organic Compounds in Drinking Water: US EPA Procedures This bulletin summarizes the analyses for organic compounds in drinking water according to US Environmental Protection Agency Series 500 methodology. Sample preparation, chromatography columns, and detection are…
Key words
supelco, supelcocustom, customstandards, standardschromfax, chromfaxbutylbenzene, butylbenzenemin, minphthalate, phthalatecalibration, calibrationorganic, organiccolumns, columnsvolatile, volatilemix, mixxylene, xylenecompounds, compoundsheptachlor
Supelco Capillary GC Columns
2001|Merck|Technical notes
Bulletin 875C Supelco Capillary GC Columns Chemical structures, polarities, operating temperature ranges, and chemical compatibilities of Supelco™ generalpurpose capillary GC columns and columns for specific clinical, environmental, food/beverage, and petroleum/ chemical applications are summarized in this bulletin. This information should…
Key words
beta, betalength, lengthsupelco, supelcocolumn, columnphase, phasecapillary, capillarydescription, descriptioncolumns, columnsstationary, stationarymix, mixtest, testfused, fusedpolarity, polaritymixes, mixesvaporized
Supelco Capillary GC Columns
1999|Merck|Technical notes
Bulletin 875C Supelco Capillary GC Columns Chemical structures, polarities, operating temperature ranges, and chemical compatibilities of Supelco™ generalpurpose capillary GC columns and columns for specific clinical, environmental, food/beverage, and petroleum/ chemical applications are summarized in this bulletin. This information should…
Key words
beta, betalength, lengthsupelco, supelcocolumn, columnphase, phasecolumns, columnscapillary, capillarystationary, stationarydescription, descriptionfilm, filmfused, fusedtest, testmix, mixpolarity, polaritymixes
Bulletin 775E USEPA Procedures for Wastewater Analyses by Packed Column GC and HPLC This bulletin outlines the United States Environmental Protection Agency’s procedures for analyzing 113 organic priority pollutants in wastewater. The chromatographic column or column packing listed by the…
Key words
confirmational, confirmationalqualifications, qualificationscolumn, columnbenzo, benzopollutants, pollutantssupelco, supelcobhc, bhcfluoranthene, fluoranthenemin, mindetector, detectorconcentration, concentrationfid, fidanthracene, anthracenesample, sampleendosulfan