Improved Purge-Trap/GC Analysis of Volatiles in Drinking Water by US EPA Method 524.2
Applications | 1997 | MerckInstrumentation
The accurate determination of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in drinking water is critical for regulatory compliance and public health. Purge-and-trap gas chromatography (GC) is the standard approach under US EPA Methods 502.2 and 524.2, but trap performance can limit sensitivity, precision, and compound coverage. Innovations in adsorbent materials promise more robust sampling and better analytical results in routine water monitoring.
This study evaluates the performance of the VOCARB 3000 adsorbent trap for concentrating VOCs in drinking water according to EPA Method 524.2. Lab tests compare its response factors, recoveries, and precision against the conventional Tenax/silica gel/charcoal trap specified by EPA, with a focus on key regulated compounds.
Purge-and-trap sampling was performed on 5 mL water aliquots spiked at 10 ppb for each VOC. After purging for 11 min at 40 mL/min and drying for 3 min, trapped analytes were thermally desorbed directly into the GC–MS system. Desorption and bake conditions exploit the thermal stability of the VOCARB 3000 adsorbents, enabling efficient analyte release.
The VOCARB 3000 trap delivered relative standard deviations below 15% for all 62 analytes and under 7% for most, with recoveries exceeding 80%. Particularly for vinyl chloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, and carbon tetrachloride, recoveries were significantly higher than with the Tenax/silica gel/charcoal trap. The higher desorption temperature facilitated by VOCARB 3000 adsorbents produced sharper, focused peaks and improved chromatographic resolution.
VOCARB 3000 provides a single-trap solution for drinking water, wastewater, and hazardous waste VOC analyses, reducing inventory complexity. Its superior thermal stability and hydrophobicity enhance method robustness, enabling reliable QA/QC and compliance with multiple EPA methods. Laboratories can achieve consistent sensitivity across a broad analyte spectrum.
Advances in adsorbent chemistry will drive further improvements in capacity, selectivity, and thermal resilience. Integration of automated purge-trap samplers with real-time data processing and lower detection limits will expand applications into trace-level monitoring and emerging contaminants. Customized trap formulations can target specialized compound classes in complex matrices.
The VOCARB 3000 adsorbent trap meets or exceeds EPA Method 524.2 performance criteria, offering enhanced recoveries, precision, and chromatographic quality compared to traditional traps. Its versatility across EPA volatile methods makes it an effective tool for routine water quality and environmental compliance testing.
GC/MSD, Purge and Trap, Consumables
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerMerck
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The accurate determination of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in drinking water is critical for regulatory compliance and public health. Purge-and-trap gas chromatography (GC) is the standard approach under US EPA Methods 502.2 and 524.2, but trap performance can limit sensitivity, precision, and compound coverage. Innovations in adsorbent materials promise more robust sampling and better analytical results in routine water monitoring.
Objectives and Overview
This study evaluates the performance of the VOCARB 3000 adsorbent trap for concentrating VOCs in drinking water according to EPA Method 524.2. Lab tests compare its response factors, recoveries, and precision against the conventional Tenax/silica gel/charcoal trap specified by EPA, with a focus on key regulated compounds.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Purge-and-trap sampling was performed on 5 mL water aliquots spiked at 10 ppb for each VOC. After purging for 11 min at 40 mL/min and drying for 3 min, trapped analytes were thermally desorbed directly into the GC–MS system. Desorption and bake conditions exploit the thermal stability of the VOCARB 3000 adsorbents, enabling efficient analyte release.
Used Instrumentation
- Trap: VOCARB 3000 (10 cm Carbopack B/6 cm Carboxen 1000/1 cm Carboxen 1001)
- Purge parameters: 11 min, 40 mL/min; Dry: 3 min
- Desorption: 250 °C for 4 min; Bake: 280 °C for 10 min
- Column: VOCOL fused silica, 105 m × 0.53 mm ID, 3 µm film
- Oven program: 35 °C (10 min) to 200 °C at 4 °C/min, hold 10 min
- Carrier gas: helium at 10 mL/min
- Detection: mass spectrometry scan m/z 35–260 at 0.6 s/scan
Main Results and Discussion
The VOCARB 3000 trap delivered relative standard deviations below 15% for all 62 analytes and under 7% for most, with recoveries exceeding 80%. Particularly for vinyl chloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, and carbon tetrachloride, recoveries were significantly higher than with the Tenax/silica gel/charcoal trap. The higher desorption temperature facilitated by VOCARB 3000 adsorbents produced sharper, focused peaks and improved chromatographic resolution.
Benefits and Practical Applications
VOCARB 3000 provides a single-trap solution for drinking water, wastewater, and hazardous waste VOC analyses, reducing inventory complexity. Its superior thermal stability and hydrophobicity enhance method robustness, enabling reliable QA/QC and compliance with multiple EPA methods. Laboratories can achieve consistent sensitivity across a broad analyte spectrum.
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advances in adsorbent chemistry will drive further improvements in capacity, selectivity, and thermal resilience. Integration of automated purge-trap samplers with real-time data processing and lower detection limits will expand applications into trace-level monitoring and emerging contaminants. Customized trap formulations can target specialized compound classes in complex matrices.
Conclusion
The VOCARB 3000 adsorbent trap meets or exceeds EPA Method 524.2 performance criteria, offering enhanced recoveries, precision, and chromatographic quality compared to traditional traps. Its versatility across EPA volatile methods makes it an effective tool for routine water quality and environmental compliance testing.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Adsorbent Trap for GC Analyses of Volatile Organic Compounds in Wastewater
1995|Merck|Applications
Application Note 30 Adsorbent Trap for GC Analyses of Volatile Organic Compounds in Wastewater Adsorbents used in VOCARB purge traps offer superior adsorption/desorption characteristics, thermal stability, and hydrophobicity for monitoring volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in water. Response factors for compounds…
Key words
vocarb, vocarbtraps, trapstrap, trapvolatile, volatileadsorbents, adsorbentsepa, epachloride, chloridechloroethane, chloroethanebromomethane, bromomethaneadsorbent, adsorbentchloromethane, chloromethanebromoform, bromoformvinyl, vinylwastewater, wastewaterdyna
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, mixcompounds, compoundsxylene, xyleneheptachlor
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, mixcompounds, compoundsxylene, xyleneheptachlor
Solid Phase Microextraction of Volatile Compounds
1998|Merck|Applications
Application Note 11 Solid Phase Microextraction of Volatile Compounds Solid phase microextraction eliminates most of the drawbacks to purge and trap sample preparation techniques. The volatile compounds listed in US EPA Method 524.2 (a drinking water analysis) were analyzed by…
Key words
fiber, fiberbutylbenzene, butylbenzenespme, spmevolatile, volatilesampling, samplingmicroextraction, microextractioncompounds, compoundsxylene, xyleneconstants, constantsbromobenzene, bromobenzenebromomethane, bromomethanechloromethane, chloromethanebromodichloromethane, bromodichloromethanebromoform, bromoformlapses