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Agilent ICP-MS Journal (Issue 12, April 2002)

Others | 2002 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC, ICP/MS, Speciation analysis
Industries
Environmental
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Significance of the Topic


The rapid tightening of drinking water quality regulations worldwide, coupled with the growing demand for high-throughput, ultra-trace analysis, has driven the adoption of inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) as a primary tool for routine environmental testing. Its ability to achieve detection limits well below regulatory thresholds, minimal sample preparation, and flexible hyphenation with chromatographic and sample-handling systems make ICP-MS indispensable for compliance monitoring, method development and emerging speciation studies.

Objectives and Study Overview


This collection of articles presents:
  • New Japanese drinking water regulations and their analytical requirements.
  • An update on the US EPA’s lowered arsenic maximum contaminant level (MCL).
  • A case study of high-throughput drinking water testing at Severn Trent Laboratories using Agilent 7500i ICP-MS.
  • Method development for organotin speciation by GC-ICP-MS.
  • Guidance on updating Agilent ChemStation software for ICP-MS.
  • Practical enhancements such as pre-assembled ISIS tubing kits, community forum launch, e-seminars and industry awards.

Methodology and Used Instrumentation


Primary instrumentation and methodologies highlighted include:
  • Agilent 7500 Series ICP-MS (7500c with reaction cell, 7500i, 4500 series) equipped with Intelligent Sequencing QA/QC software.
  • Cetac ASX-500 autosampler for unattended sample loading.
  • Agilent GC-ICP-MS interface coupled to an Agilent 6890 GC for volatile organotin analysis.
  • Optional carrier gas modifiers (5% O₂ in He) to enhance plasma robustness and sensitivity for GC-MS effluent.
  • Agilent ChemStation software patches and QC templates for automated SOP-compliance in drinking water testing.
  • Integrated Sample Introduction System (ISIS) with pre-assembled tubing kits for high uptake/rinse rates, auto-dilution and discrete sampling.

Main Results and Discussion


Key findings include:
  • Japanese regulations (2001 revision) now approve ICP-MS for 14 trace elements, requiring quantification limits at least 1/10 of each element’s MAC. ICP-MS eliminates complex pre-concentration and outperforms older ICP-OES methods, particularly for uranium at 0.2 ppb.
  • The US EPA lowered the arsenic MCL from 50 ppb to 10 ppb by 2006, rescinding less sensitive ICP-AES methods and endorsing ICP-MS (EPA 200.8) alongside graphite furnace and hydride AA techniques.
  • Severn Trent Laboratories (UK) achieved sustained throughput of ~300 drinking water samples per day with minimal downtime by deploying two 7500i ICP-MS systems, streamlining acid digestion, autosampler loading and overnight data acquisition.
  • GC-ICP-MS speciation of nine organotin species yielded detection limits in the range of 2–6 ppt as Sn and excellent linearity (R² > 0.995). Optimal plasma conditions (1300 W forward power, 5% O₂ in carrier gas) suppressed carbon deposit formation and maximized sensitivity.
  • Software updates for ChemStation resolve minor faults, improve instrument support and integrate QA/QC templates compliant with national SOPs for consistent, automated calibration, drift checks and error flagging.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Adoption of the described methodologies and instrumentation offers:
  • Regulatory compliance with low-ppb and sub-ppb detection requirements without complex digestion or pre-concentration steps.
  • Enhanced laboratory productivity via overnight runs, automated QC, fast autosampler cycles and minimal maintenance downtime.
  • Broad analytical flexibility—from multi-element screens for environmental waters to specialized speciation of organometallic compounds.
  • Robust QA/QC workflows and audit trails to satisfy third-party accreditation and client confidence in data quality.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Emerging directions include:
  • Expansion of reaction-cell and collision-cell technologies to mitigate spectral interferences in complex matrices.
  • Further hyphenation of ICP-MS with advanced separation techniques (e.g., GC, LC, laser ablation) for speciation and spatially resolved analysis.
  • Integration of online sample preparation modules (auto-dilution, matrix removal) within ICP-MS sequences.
  • Cloud-based data management and collaborative user forums for method sharing, troubleshooting and continuous software/firmware updates.
  • Broader outsourcing of regulated analyses to private and contract labs under tightened QA/QC regimes.

Conclusion


The April 2002 issue of the Agilent ICP-MS Journal underscores the pivotal role of modern ICP-MS platforms in meeting emerging drinking water regulations, boosting laboratory throughput and enabling advanced speciation studies. Continued hardware, software and workflow innovations will drive further adoption of ICP-MS across environmental, industrial and research laboratories.

References


  • De la Calle-Guntiñas MB, Scerbo R, Chiavarini S, Quevauviller P, Morabito R. Applied Organometallic Chemistry 1997, 11, 693.
  • US EPA. Implementation of 10 ppb Arsenic Standard in Drinking Water. EPA 815-F-01-010, October 2001.

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