1 / 24

PS 26 Playground - Soil Analysis

PS 26 Playground - Soil Analysis. Analytical Chemistry of Pollutants Dr. Joe Gardella Todd M. Alonzo, Dominic O. Hull, Doris J. Glykys, Ed Tasber, and David G. Twoey. Why Did We Choose PS26?. Soil Analysis GC/MS Elemental Analysis - Why Lead? Requested by Community Buffalo China

evonne
Télécharger la présentation

PS 26 Playground - Soil Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PS 26 Playground - Soil Analysis Analytical Chemistry of Pollutants Dr. Joe Gardella Todd M. Alonzo, Dominic O. Hull, Doris J. Glykys, Ed Tasber, and David G. Twoey

  2. Why Did We Choose PS26? • Soil Analysis • GC/MS • Elemental Analysis - Why Lead? • Requested by Community • Buffalo China • Very Toxic Metal

  3. Donned Gloves and Safety Glasses Spade Rinsed with 50/50 v/v Nitric Acid/DI Water Dig Hole and Obtain sample at 6” Depth Refill Hole Jars Amber to Avoid Photolysis No Head Space Above Sample Sealed with Foil Cooled on Dry Ice Sampling Technique

  4. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  5. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  6. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  7. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  8. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  9. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  10. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  11. Sampling Sites       Lead Synthetic Organic Compounds  Harrison St. (Dead End)

  12. Elemental Analysis • Digestion • Flame Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy • Inductively Coupled Plasma / Atomic Emission Spectroscopy • Standard Addition • Results

  13. Digestion • EPA Method 3050 • Successive Nitric Acid Additions and Reflux • Reduce Volume • Peroxide Neutralization • Reduce Volume • GFAA and ICP/MS • Addition of HCl Acid • FLAA and ICP/AES

  14. Direct Aspiration Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (FLAA) • A sample is aspirated and atomized in a flame. • A characteristic light beam is directed through the flame into a monochromator, and onto a detector that measures the amount of absorbed light. • Absorption depends upon the presence of free unexcited ground-state atoms in the flame. • Beer-Lambert Law

  15. Standard Addition • The preparation of standards that match the samples is often impossible or extremely difficult. • Accurate determinations are possible by making the concentration calibration in the presence of the matrix. • By adding aliquots of a standard to portions of the sample, any interferent present in the sample will affect the standard and sample absorbance similarly.

  16. If Interferences are present: • The number of ground state atoms producing atomic absorption will be affected. • The absorbance increase from the added standard will also change by the same proportional amount since the concentration of interferent is the same in each solution.

  17. Determination of Concentration

  18. Comparison of Lead Results

  19. Synthetic Organic Analysis • Digestion • Volume Reduction • GC-MS Analysis • Qualitative Analysis • Quantitative Analysis

  20. Digestion • EPA Method 3550 • Addition of NaSO4 • Successive Addition of 50/50 v/v Methylene Chloride/Acetone with Ultrasonic Extraction • Vacuum Filtration • Reduce Volume

  21. GC-MS Analysis • Separation of Components • Using Capillary Column • by Molecular Weight • Mass Analysis • Fragmentation of Compounds • Mass Separation by Mass-Charge Ratio

  22. Acenaphthene Anthracene Bis(2-ethylhexyl) Phthalate Dibenzofuran Fluranthene Fluorene 2-Methyl- Naphthalene Naphthalene Pyrene 4-Fluoro-1,1’-Biphenyl 1,2-Dihydro- Acenaphthylene Qualitative Results

  23. Quantitative Analysis

  24. Conclusions • Lead and PAHs were detected in the soil • Concentration of lead in the park was below action level • Concentration of lead at the dead end was above 400 ppm level • Many of the PAHs detected could not be quantified

More Related