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A Solid-Phase Extraction Method for Analyzing Trace Amounts of Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins and Dibenzofurans in Waste Water

  • Received : 2011.02.21
  • Accepted : 2011.03.07
  • Published : 2011.03.15

Abstract

The Korean government has regulated emission of polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) in waste water of manufacturing facilities producing chlorinated compounds since 2009. As this regulation is expected to be reinforced in 2013 to 50 pg I-TEQ/L, a large sample volume is required for the analysis of trace amounts of PCDD/Fs in waste water. Liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) is used to extract PCDD/Fs from aqueous samples; however, its low efficiency makes it inadequate for analyzing large sample volumes. Herein, we present a disk-type solid-phase extraction (SPE) method for the analysis of dioxin at a part per quadrillion level in waste water. This SPE system contains airtight glass covers with a decompression pump, which enables continuous semi-automated extraction. Small (0.5 L) and large (7 L) samples were extracted using LLE and SPE methods, respectively. The method detection limits (MDLs) were 0.001.0.25 and 0.015.4.1 pg I-TEQ/L for the SPE and LLE methods, respectively. The concentrations of detected congeners with both methods were similar. However, the concentrations of several congeners that were not detected with the LLE method were quantified using the SPE method.

Keywords

Introduction

Polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans (PCDD/Fs) are among the most toxic chemicals known, with carcinogenic, immunotoxic, reproductive, and developmental effects in mammals, including interference with regulatory hormones in humans.1−6 PCDD/Fs are formed as unintentional byproducts during incineration, chlorinated compound production, and industrial thermal processes.7−9 The Stockholm convention (2005), an international treaty, banned persistent organic pollutants, including PCDD/Fs. Since ratifying the Stockholm convention, the Korean government has regulated PCDD/Fs in the effluent of manufacturing facilities producing chlorinated compounds10 and has lowered the limits set in this regulation from 300 pg I-TEQ/L in 2009 to 50 pg I-TEQ/L in 2013. Given the extremely low emitted concentrations of PCDD/Fs, which are in the range of parts per quadrillion (ppq), a low detection limit is required for accurate analyses. This implies that a large sample volume is required for PCDD/Fs analysis.11−12 Liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) has been used widely to extract PCDD/Fs from aqueous samples.13−14 However, it is inadequate for analyzing large sample volumes because of its low efficiency and the need for large amounts of organic solvents and several immersions, which lead to low recoveries. A more efficient system is required for analyzing PCDD/Fs in large aqueous samples. Recently, it has been shown that an octadecyl (C18) disk with an i.d. of 90 mm in a semi-automated solid-phase extraction (SPE) system can be used to extract PCDD/Fs from water samples of up to 40 L.15−16 This system has been tested for the analysis of PCDD/Fs in effluent samples.

The present study validated the new semi-automated SPE system by measuring the recoveries and comparing them with those of an LLE system. The method detection limits (MDLs) and the concentrations according to the sample volume were also compared between the SPE and LLE systems.

 

Experimental

Reagents and standards

Hexane, toluene, dichloromethane, acetone, and methanol of high-performance liquid chromatography grade were obtained from J.T. Baker (Phillipsburg, NJ, USA). n-Nonane of 99% purity was purchased from Acros Organics (Geel, Belgium). A cleanup standard (37Cl4-2,3,7,8-TCDD) was from Wellington Laboratories (Toronto, Canada). The calibration standard and internal standard were from Cambridge Isotope Laboratories (Andover, MA, USA). Sodium sulfate was obtained from Kanto (Tokyo, Japan). Multilayer silica gel and basic alumina for column chromatography were obtained from Wako (Osaka, Japan) and Sigma-Aldrich (Milwaukee, WI, USA).

Semi-automated disk-type SPE system

Empore C18 disks (i.d., 90 mm; thickness, 0.5 mm; capacity, 70 mg) and a glass fiber filter (GFF; i.d., 90 mm; pore size, 0.7 µm) were purchased from 3 M (St. Paul, Minnesota, USA) and Whatman (Maidstone, Kent, UK), respectively. The semi-automated SPE system was from GL Science (Tokyo, Japan). This system can continuously extract an aqueous sample at a maximum flow rate of 200 mL/min.16

Sample preparation

Samples of 17 toxic 2,3,7,8-substituted PCDD/F congeners were prepared according to the Official Method for PCDD/Fs in Waste Water-HRGC/HRMS (2007), which is a modified extraction procedure. After adding 13C12-labeled PCDD/F internal standards, a 0.5-L sample was extracted in a funnel with hexane using the LLE method, and a 7-L sample was extracted using disk-type SPE and Soxhlet methods. The samples were cleaned on a multi-silica and alumina column. Finally, 13C12-labeled PCDD/F injection standards were added to the concentrated samples under a stream N2 gas before analysis. The toxic equivalent concentration (TEQ) was calculated using international toxicity equivalence factors (TEFs).17

Instrumental analysis

The PCDD/Fs were analyzed using GC-HRMS in multi-ion detection mode (MID; the same as selected ion monitoring, or SIM) using a Trace GC ultra-gas chromatograph coupled to a DFS (Thermo Scientific, Germany) and equipped with an SP-2331 capillary column (60 m × 0.32 mm, 0.2 µm). The HRMS system was operated in electron impact ionization mode (40 eV) at a resolution of R>10,000 (10% valley) (Table 1).

 

Results and Discussion

Determination of the method detection limits

The procedure for determining the MDLs followed the Japanese Industrial Standards (JIS) K0312 method.18 We prepared five water blanks that were as free of analytes as possible to check the blank levels of the 17 congeners using each method. For a few analytes (1,2,3,4,6,7,8-HpCDF and OCDF in the LLE method and OCDD and OCDF in the SPE method), background contamination was detected. Standard deviations of the detected background concentrations were used in determining the MDL. To calculate the MDL, seven samples spiked with 30 µl of CS1 standard were processed using both analytical methods (LLE and SPE), and the samples were analyzed using GC-HRMS to determine the standard deviations of the quantified concentrations. Detection limit (DL) was defined as three times the standard deviation. The MDL was determined using the following equation;18

The MDLs were compared between the SPE and LLE methods (Table 2). The MDLs ranged from 0.001 to 0.25 pg I-TEQ/L for the SPE method and from 0.015 to 4.1 pg I-TEQ/L for the LLE method. The MDL with the SPE method and a 7-L sample was one-tenth the MDL with the LLE method and a 0.5-L sample.

Table 1.The experimental conditions used for GC-HRMS.

Table 2.The determined method detection limits for seventeen 2,3,7,8-substituted PCDD/Fs according to the sample volume.

Waste water analysis

The extraction efficiencies of the semi-automated SPE system and the LLE system were comparable for spiked deionized water samples. The optimized SPE method was used to analyze two real waste water samples from industrial effluent. Tables 3 and 4 compare the recoveries and concentrations obtained from the two waste water samples using the SPE and LLE methods, respectively. The recoveries of 13C-labeled compounds were in the range of 56-83% for waste water sample A and 60-87% for waste water sample B, which met the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 161319 and JIS K 031218 criteria. There were no significant differences in the recoveries between the LLE and SPE methods, and the concentrations of the detected congeners determined with both methods were similar. However, because the MDLs were lower with SPE than with LLE, the concentrations of four congeners (1234678-HpCDD, 2378-TeCDF, 23478-PeCDF, and 123789-HxCDF) that were not detected with the LLE method could be quantified using the disk-type SPE method for waste water sample A. The 1234678-HpCDD in waste water sample A was quantified with the SPE method (concentration 0.09 pg I-TEQ/L), whereas it was not detected with the LLE method because the MDL for 1234678-HpCDD with the LLE method (0.13 pg I-TEQ/L) was higher than its concentration. Similarly, for waste water sample B, five more congeners (OCDD, 123478-HxCDF, 123678-HxCDF, 234678-HxCDF, and 1234789-HpCDF) were quantified using SPE method.

Table 3.The measurement results, including recovery, for waste water sample A.

Table 4.The measurement results, including recovery, for waste water sample B.

If the LLE method was used for 7-L sample preparation to meet the detection limit, extraction should be repeated several times. It requires a lot of time and large amounts of organic solvents, which lead to low recoveries. The SPE method enabled continuous filtration with semi-automation and served as an improved absorption system for monitoring PCDD/Fs in aqueous samples with high recoveries and easy operation. This method was validated up to 40-L sample previously16 and the recoveries were in the range of 62~95%. However, in the case of waste water including a lot of suspended solid, it took longer time to extract since the GFF was clogged. To solve clogging trouble, it will be necessary to apply another type of filters, which is an area still under study.

Figure 1.Chromatograms of 1234678-HpCDD in waste water sample A extracted by LLE (a) and SPE methods (b).

 

Conclusions

In this study, 7-L waste water samples were extracted using a C18 disk with a 90-mm i.d., and 0.5-L samples were extracted using liquid-liquid extraction. A comparison of the extraction efficiencies between the semi-automated SPE system and the LLE system revealed no significant differences in recoveries between the two methods. The MDLs of the SPE method were less than one-tenth the MDLs of the LLE method, allowing several congeners undetectable with LLE to be quantified using the disk-type SPE method. The semi-automated disk-type SPE system is an appropriate method for analyzing sub-ppq levels of PCDD/Fs in waste water samples with high recoveries and easy operation.

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  2. Integrated hybrid treatment for the remediation of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin vol.435-436, 2012, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2012.07.079
  3. A Solid-Phase Extraction Method for Analyzing Trace Amounts of Polychlorinated Dibenzo-p-Dioxins and Dibenzofurans in Waste Water vol.2, pp.1, 2011, https://doi.org/10.5478/MSL.2011.2.1.012