Analysis of Environmental Waters for Cations and Ammonium Using a Compact Ion Chromatography System
Applications | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The accurate determination of common alkali and alkaline earth cations, as well as ammonium, is critical for monitoring water hardness, corrosion and scaling control, wastewater discharge compliance, and aquatic toxicity. Regulatory bodies in the EU, Japan, and many public water suppliers report these parameters, yet demands for faster, more robust analysis methods continue to grow, particularly for high ionic strength samples and trace-level ammonium in the presence of large sodium backgrounds.
This study evaluated a compact high-pressure ion chromatography (HPIC) system configured with a 4 µm particle Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ IonPac™ CS16 column and suppressed conductivity detection. The goal was to shorten run times, improve resolution, and achieve reliable quantification of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in various environmental water matrices.
• Temperature influenced retention, especially potassium, underscoring the need for precise column oven control.
• Increasing flow from 0.64 to 1.0 mL/min reduced run time from 25 min to just over 18 min while preserving baseline resolution of all six cations.
• Method detection limits ranged from 0.12 to 2.24 µg/L, comparable to or better than previous reports, with linear calibration over three orders of magnitude for most analytes.
• Retention time precision was ≤ 0.03% RSD and area precision ≤ 0.19% RSD, reflecting the stability of reagent-free eluent generation.
• Spike recoveries in reagent water, drinking water, and municipal wastewater fell between 89% and 117%, demonstrating accuracy across diverse matrices.
• The high capacity of the CS16-4 µm column enabled direct analysis of high ionic strength samples and successful separation of trace ammonium from a 10 000-fold excess of sodium.
Advances in ultra-high pressure IC will allow even smaller particle columns and faster separations. Gradient elution methods could further optimize selectivity for challenging analyte pairs. Integration with mass spectrometry and automated on-line sample preparation will extend applications to speciation studies, multi-dimensional separations, and real-time environmental monitoring. Portable HPIC systems may enable field-based analysis for rapid decision making.
The compact Integrion HPIC system with a 4 µm IonPac CS16 column delivers fast, precise, and sensitive determination of inorganic cations and ammonium in environmental waters. High capacity and pressure tolerance support analysis of diverse matrices with minimal sample pretreatment, making this approach well suited for modern water quality laboratories.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The accurate determination of common alkali and alkaline earth cations, as well as ammonium, is critical for monitoring water hardness, corrosion and scaling control, wastewater discharge compliance, and aquatic toxicity. Regulatory bodies in the EU, Japan, and many public water suppliers report these parameters, yet demands for faster, more robust analysis methods continue to grow, particularly for high ionic strength samples and trace-level ammonium in the presence of large sodium backgrounds.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluated a compact high-pressure ion chromatography (HPIC) system configured with a 4 µm particle Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ IonPac™ CS16 column and suppressed conductivity detection. The goal was to shorten run times, improve resolution, and achieve reliable quantification of lithium, sodium, ammonium, potassium, magnesium, and calcium in various environmental water matrices.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Instrument: Thermo Scientific™ Dionex™ Integrion™ HPIC system
- Columns: Dionex IonPac CG16-4 µm guard and CS16-4 µm separation columns (4 × 50 and 4 × 250 mm)
- Eluent: 30 mM methanesulfonic acid generated by EGC 500 cartridge with CR-CTC 600 trap
- Suppressor: Dionex CERS 500 electrolytic suppressor, recycle mode
- Flow rate and temperature: 0.9 mL/min at 40 °C, detector compartment at 15 °C
- Detection: Suppressed conductivity
Main Results and Discussion
• Temperature influenced retention, especially potassium, underscoring the need for precise column oven control.
• Increasing flow from 0.64 to 1.0 mL/min reduced run time from 25 min to just over 18 min while preserving baseline resolution of all six cations.
• Method detection limits ranged from 0.12 to 2.24 µg/L, comparable to or better than previous reports, with linear calibration over three orders of magnitude for most analytes.
• Retention time precision was ≤ 0.03% RSD and area precision ≤ 0.19% RSD, reflecting the stability of reagent-free eluent generation.
• Spike recoveries in reagent water, drinking water, and municipal wastewater fell between 89% and 117%, demonstrating accuracy across diverse matrices.
• The high capacity of the CS16-4 µm column enabled direct analysis of high ionic strength samples and successful separation of trace ammonium from a 10 000-fold excess of sodium.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Significant run time reduction increases sample throughput in routine monitoring laboratories.
- High detection sensitivity and broad linear range cover trace to high-concentration levels without compromising accuracy.
- Reagent-free eluent generation simplifies setup, reduces maintenance, and ensures consistency.
- Robust performance in high ionic strength and acidic samples minimizes extensive sample preparation and dilution.
Future Trends and Applications
Advances in ultra-high pressure IC will allow even smaller particle columns and faster separations. Gradient elution methods could further optimize selectivity for challenging analyte pairs. Integration with mass spectrometry and automated on-line sample preparation will extend applications to speciation studies, multi-dimensional separations, and real-time environmental monitoring. Portable HPIC systems may enable field-based analysis for rapid decision making.
Conclusion
The compact Integrion HPIC system with a 4 µm IonPac CS16 column delivers fast, precise, and sensitive determination of inorganic cations and ammonium in environmental waters. High capacity and pressure tolerance support analysis of diverse matrices with minimal sample pretreatment, making this approach well suited for modern water quality laboratories.
Reference
- 1. World Health Organization. Hardness in drinking-water. Background document for WHO Guidelines, 2011.
- 2. Jackson PE. Ion Chromatography in Environmental Analysis. Encyclopedia of Analytical Chemistry, 2000.
- 3. American Public Health Association. Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater, 18th Ed., 1992.
- 4. Thermo Scientific Application Note AN-141. Determination of Inorganic Cations and Ammonium by Ion Chromatography, 2016.
- 5. Thermo Scientific Technical Note 175. Configuring the Integrion RFIC System for High-Pressure Reagent-Free IC, 2016.
- 6. Thermo Fisher Scientific. Dionex Integrion Operator’s Manual. Sunnyvale, CA, 2016.
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