Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences

Abstract Background Perchlorate contamination of water and food poses potential health risks to humans due to the possible interference of perchlorate with the iodide uptake into the thyroid gland. Perchlorate has been found in food and drinking, surface, or swimming pool waters in many countries, i...

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Main Authors: Maike A. Seiler, Detlef Jensen, Udo Neist, Ursula K. Deister, Franz Schmitz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-11-01
Series:Environmental Sciences Europe
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12302-017-0128-7
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spelling doaj-e4812ddcd1024488b5eb314d426bd3482020-11-25T01:33:59ZengSpringerOpenEnvironmental Sciences Europe2190-47072190-47152017-11-012911910.1186/s12302-017-0128-7Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferencesMaike A. Seiler0Detlef Jensen1Udo Neist2Ursula K. Deister3Franz Schmitz4Hessian State LaboratoryThermo Fisher ScientificHessian State LaboratoryHochschule RheinMainHessian State LaboratoryAbstract Background Perchlorate contamination of water and food poses potential health risks to humans due to the possible interference of perchlorate with the iodide uptake into the thyroid gland. Perchlorate has been found in food and drinking, surface, or swimming pool waters in many countries, including the United States, Canada, France, Germany, and Switzerland, with ion chromatography (IC) being the preferred analytical method. The standardization of a robust ion chromatographic method is therefore of the high interest for public health and safety. This article summarizes the experiments and results obtained from analyzing untreated samples, considering the sample’s electrical conductance as guidance for direct sample injection as described in EPA 314.0. Results The suitability of ion chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection was tested for water samples in order to check the influence of matrix effects on the perchlorate signal of untreated samples. A sample injection volume of 750 μL was applied to the selected 2 mm IC column. The IC determination of perchlorate at low µg/L levels is challenged by the presence of high loads of matrix ions (e.g., chloride, nitrate, carbonate, and sulfate at 100 mg/L and above). Perchlorate recovery is impaired with the increasing matrix ion concentrations, and its chromatographic peak is asymmetric particularly at low perchlorate concentrations. The identification of the individual maximum concentration of interfering anions like chloride, nitrate, and sulfate that influence perchlorate recovery helps to reduce the number of sample preparation steps or an obligatory measurement of the electrical conductivity of the sample. Within the scope of this study, samples containing less than 125 mg/L of either anion did not need sample preparation. Conclusion The identification of the maximum concentration of interfering anions like chloride, nitrate, and sulfate influencing perchlorate recovery provides a simplified alternative to the EPA 314.0 method. This approach reduces unnecessary sample preparation steps while allowing a reliable prognosis of possible interferences and maintaining result quality. This study was performed to support the development of a respective international standard, which is being established by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The results of the study are also intended to be used as guidance for interested laboratories to optimize the analytical workflow for trace perchlorate determination.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12302-017-0128-7PerchlorateDisinfection byproductsIon chromatographyMethod validationChromatographic interferences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maike A. Seiler
Detlef Jensen
Udo Neist
Ursula K. Deister
Franz Schmitz
spellingShingle Maike A. Seiler
Detlef Jensen
Udo Neist
Ursula K. Deister
Franz Schmitz
Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
Environmental Sciences Europe
Perchlorate
Disinfection byproducts
Ion chromatography
Method validation
Chromatographic interferences
author_facet Maike A. Seiler
Detlef Jensen
Udo Neist
Ursula K. Deister
Franz Schmitz
author_sort Maike A. Seiler
title Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
title_short Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
title_full Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
title_fullStr Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
title_full_unstemmed Determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
title_sort determination of trace perchlorate in water: a simplified method for the identification of potential interferences
publisher SpringerOpen
series Environmental Sciences Europe
issn 2190-4707
2190-4715
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background Perchlorate contamination of water and food poses potential health risks to humans due to the possible interference of perchlorate with the iodide uptake into the thyroid gland. Perchlorate has been found in food and drinking, surface, or swimming pool waters in many countries, including the United States, Canada, France, Germany, and Switzerland, with ion chromatography (IC) being the preferred analytical method. The standardization of a robust ion chromatographic method is therefore of the high interest for public health and safety. This article summarizes the experiments and results obtained from analyzing untreated samples, considering the sample’s electrical conductance as guidance for direct sample injection as described in EPA 314.0. Results The suitability of ion chromatography with suppressed conductivity detection was tested for water samples in order to check the influence of matrix effects on the perchlorate signal of untreated samples. A sample injection volume of 750 μL was applied to the selected 2 mm IC column. The IC determination of perchlorate at low µg/L levels is challenged by the presence of high loads of matrix ions (e.g., chloride, nitrate, carbonate, and sulfate at 100 mg/L and above). Perchlorate recovery is impaired with the increasing matrix ion concentrations, and its chromatographic peak is asymmetric particularly at low perchlorate concentrations. The identification of the individual maximum concentration of interfering anions like chloride, nitrate, and sulfate that influence perchlorate recovery helps to reduce the number of sample preparation steps or an obligatory measurement of the electrical conductivity of the sample. Within the scope of this study, samples containing less than 125 mg/L of either anion did not need sample preparation. Conclusion The identification of the maximum concentration of interfering anions like chloride, nitrate, and sulfate influencing perchlorate recovery provides a simplified alternative to the EPA 314.0 method. This approach reduces unnecessary sample preparation steps while allowing a reliable prognosis of possible interferences and maintaining result quality. This study was performed to support the development of a respective international standard, which is being established by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). The results of the study are also intended to be used as guidance for interested laboratories to optimize the analytical workflow for trace perchlorate determination.
topic Perchlorate
Disinfection byproducts
Ion chromatography
Method validation
Chromatographic interferences
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12302-017-0128-7
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