Selected Topics in Water Quality Analysis: Mercury and Polar Organics Monitoring

911437

07/01/1991

Event
International Conference On Environmental Systems
Authors Abstract
Content
Space Station Freedom presents challenges in water contamination and in the preconcentration of trace contaminants for subsequent analysis. Terrestrial methodologies for the trace level determination of mercury, alcohols, and phenols have been evaluated against levels of detection, complexity, and phase separation requirements. Microgravity compatible modifications of standard methods have been developed and tested. A total mercury sensor, employing solid phase sorption of mercury metal from the analyte followed by determination at a gold film electrode, has been breadboarded and shows a minimum level of detection of less than 0.5ppb. The system uses sodium borohydride as a reagent to facilitate mercury reduction and the decomposition of organomercury compounds. Phenols are determined using a modification of the VOC methodology previously described followed by GC/MS analysis; detection levels below 1ppb have been achieved. Short chain aliphatic alcohols are determined using GC/MS on 2μl samples injected directly on a DB624 column, with detection levels below 500 ppb.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/911437
Pages
9
Citation
Burchfield, D., Evans, L., Niu, W., Bodek, I. et al., "Selected Topics in Water Quality Analysis: Mercury and Polar Organics Monitoring," SAE Technical Paper 911437, 1991, https://doi.org/10.4271/911437.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Jul 1, 1991
Product Code
911437
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English