Automated ICP-MS method to measure bromine, chlorine, and iodine species and total metals content in drinking water

•Fully automated ICP-MS method to measure EPA mandated metals and Cl, Br, and I species for drinking water with a single apparatus.•Validation and performance of a rapid, single method to analyze bromide, bromate, iodate, iodide, chloride, chlorite, chlorate, and perchlorate.•Autodilution of samples...

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Veröffentlicht in:Talanta open 2020-08, Vol.1, p.100002, Article 100002
Hauptverfasser: Quarles, C. Derrick, Toms, Andrew D., Smith, Ronald, Sullivan, Patrick, Bass, David, Leone, John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Fully automated ICP-MS method to measure EPA mandated metals and Cl, Br, and I species for drinking water with a single apparatus.•Validation and performance of a rapid, single method to analyze bromide, bromate, iodate, iodide, chloride, chlorite, chlorate, and perchlorate.•Autodilution of samples and standards eliminated the sample preparation step for the ICP-MS analysis.•Samples from the Atlanta, GA, USA area were collected and analyzed as a proof of concept for this newly developed integrated method. The disinfection of drinking water is an important aspect to human health. However, this process leads to potentially harmful disinfection by-products that should be monitored prior to drinking water reaching homes and businesses. Agencies such as the World Health Organization and United States Environmental Protection Agency set recommended levels for disinfection by-products and trace elements to keep the consumer healthy. In this work a single platform, automated total metals (adapted EPA 6020B method) and halogen speciation method is presented for water analysis that can help laboratories become more efficient while providing new capabilities. Samples from around the Atlanta, GA, USA region were collected and analyzed to investigate the effects of the local counties’ water before and after the water treatment processes. The detection limits for this method were found to be 29 ng L−1 bromide, 31 ng L−1 bromate, 5.5 ng L−1 iodide, 1.8 ng L−1 iodate, 0.7 µg L−1 chloride, 2.6 µg L−1 chlorite, 6.8 µg L−1 chlorate, and 9.5 µg L−1 perchlorate. This halogen speciation method is completed in under 3 min per sample and can be automated into a single analytical run with trace elemental analysis when combined with an ICP-MS. [Display omitted]
ISSN:2666-8319
2666-8319
DOI:10.1016/j.talo.2020.100002