Analysis of AOF (Adsorbable Organic Fluorine) According EPA Method 1621
Applications | 2025 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
This application addresses the growing need for reliable screening of adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) in water. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and other fluorinated organic compounds pose environmental and health risks due to their persistence and bioaccumulation. AOF analysis based on EPA Method 1621 provides a comprehensive measure of total organic fluorine load, supporting water quality monitoring, regulatory compliance, and risk assessment.
The study demonstrates the integration of combustion ion chromatography (CIC) for AOF determination by applying EPA Method 1621. It evaluates initial precision and recovery (IPR) and method detection limits (MDL) using perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS) as the spiking compound. The goal is to confirm method performance against regulatory criteria and to showcase automated sample processing.
The procedure involves five main steps:
A six-point combustion calibration curve (1.8–442.5 µg/L fluoride) was fitted with a quadratic equation, with measured concentrations within 80–120% of nominal values. Method blanks yielded less than 0.60 µg/L fluoride (criteria < 4.0 µg/L). IPR tests at 25 µg/L PFHxS showed an average recovery of 95.5% and RSD of 2.4% (criteria: recovery 80–120%, RSD < 20%). MDL calculations gave MDLb = 0.97 µg/L and MDLs = 1.27 µg/L, establishing an MDL of 1.27 µg/L in compliance with EPA Method 1621.
The CIC approach provides:
Advances may include coupling AOF screening with mass spectrometry for compound identification, miniaturized CIC modules for on-site monitoring, expanded application to complex matrices (soil, biota), and integration into green analytical workflows to minimize reagent use and waste.
The combination of the AQF-5000H combustion unit and the HIC-ESP ion chromatograph delivers a validated, automated solution for AOF screening under EPA Method 1621. The method meets precision, recovery, and detection limit requirements, offering a powerful tool for comprehensive fluorine analysis in water.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Importance of the Topic
This application addresses the growing need for reliable screening of adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) in water. Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and other fluorinated organic compounds pose environmental and health risks due to their persistence and bioaccumulation. AOF analysis based on EPA Method 1621 provides a comprehensive measure of total organic fluorine load, supporting water quality monitoring, regulatory compliance, and risk assessment.
Aims and Overview of the Study
The study demonstrates the integration of combustion ion chromatography (CIC) for AOF determination by applying EPA Method 1621. It evaluates initial precision and recovery (IPR) and method detection limits (MDL) using perfluorohexane sulfonic acid (PFHxS) as the spiking compound. The goal is to confirm method performance against regulatory criteria and to showcase automated sample processing.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The procedure involves five main steps:
- Sample loading onto a granular activated carbon (GAC) column via TXA-04 absorption unit to capture organic fluorine.
- Rinsing the GAC column to remove inorganic fluoride.
- Transfer of the GAC to a ceramic combustion boat.
- High-temperature combustion (1000–1100 °C) of the sample to convert organic fluorine to hydrogen fluoride.
- Collection of combustion gases in an absorption solution, followed by fluoride analysis by ion chromatography.
Instrumentation Used
- AQF-5000H combustion unit (Nittoseiko Analytech) with ceramic sample boat and quartz-ceramic pyrolysis tube.
- HIC-ESP ion chromatograph (Shimadzu) equipped with an electrodialytic suppressor (ICDS-40A).
- Shim-pack IC-SA2 anion exchange column (250 mm × 4.0 mm, 9 µm).
- Gas flows: oxygen 400 mL/min, argon 200 mL/min, humidified argon 100 mL/min.
- Absorption solution: ultrapure water, final volume 11.3 mL.
Main Results and Discussion
A six-point combustion calibration curve (1.8–442.5 µg/L fluoride) was fitted with a quadratic equation, with measured concentrations within 80–120% of nominal values. Method blanks yielded less than 0.60 µg/L fluoride (criteria < 4.0 µg/L). IPR tests at 25 µg/L PFHxS showed an average recovery of 95.5% and RSD of 2.4% (criteria: recovery 80–120%, RSD < 20%). MDL calculations gave MDLb = 0.97 µg/L and MDLs = 1.27 µg/L, establishing an MDL of 1.27 µg/L in compliance with EPA Method 1621.
Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method
The CIC approach provides:
- Comprehensive screening for all adsorbable organic fluorine, including non-targeted PFAS and fluorinated compounds.
- Automation of sample combustion and ion chromatography for high throughput and reduced operator intervention.
- Simplicity and robustness suitable for routine monitoring in environmental and industrial laboratories.
Future Trends and Applications
Advances may include coupling AOF screening with mass spectrometry for compound identification, miniaturized CIC modules for on-site monitoring, expanded application to complex matrices (soil, biota), and integration into green analytical workflows to minimize reagent use and waste.
Conclusion
The combination of the AQF-5000H combustion unit and the HIC-ESP ion chromatograph delivers a validated, automated solution for AOF screening under EPA Method 1621. The method meets precision, recovery, and detection limit requirements, offering a powerful tool for comprehensive fluorine analysis in water.
Reference
- USEPA Method 1621: Screening Method for the Determination of Adsorbable Organic Fluorine in Aqueous Matrices by Combustion Ion Chromatography.
- 40 CFR Part 136, Appendix B: Definition and Procedure for the Determination of the Method Detection Limit—Revision 2.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Analysis of Adsorbable Organic Fluorine (AOF) by Combustion Ion Chromatography (CIC)
2024|Shimadzu|Applications
Suppressor Ion Chromatograph HIC-ESP Application News Analysis of Adsorbable Organic Fluorine (AOF) by Combustion Ion Chromatography(CIC) Tomoka Kaseda User Benefits The combination of the combustion unit and IC can perform AOF analysis according EPA Draft Method 1621. AOF…
Key words
ipr, iprfluorine, fluorineesp, espriver, riverhic, hicaof, aofpfas, pfasrecovery, recoverycic, cicchromatograph, chromatographnews, newssuppresoe, suppresoecombustion, combustionshimadzu, shimadzukaseda
Screening of PFAS compounds in wastewater using adsorbable organic fluorine with combustion ion chromatography (CIC)
2024|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Application note | 002748 Environmental Screening of PFAS compounds in wastewater using adsorbable organic fluorine with combustion ion chromatography (CIC) Results from U.S. EPA draft Method 1621 Collaboration Study Authors Introduction Terri Christison and Neil Rumachik Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances…
Key words
gac, gacfluoride, fluoridepfas, pfascombustion, combustioncic, cicadsorbable, adsorbablepfhxs, pfhxsfluorine, fluorinedionex, dionexstandard, standardsubstances, substancesaof, aofmethod, methodidc, idcmdl
Screening of PFAS compounds in aqueous matrices using adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) with combustion ion chromatography
2024|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Technical note | 003056 Environmental Techniques for successful implementation of U.S. EPA Method 1621 Screening of PFAS compounds in aqueous matrices using adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) with combustion ion chromatography Authors Introduction Terri Christison and Neil Rumachik Per- and polyfluoroalkyl…
Key words
combustion, combustionadsorbable, adsorbablegac, gacpfas, pfaswool, woolfluoride, fluorideboat, boatadsorbed, adsorbedempty, emptycic, cicadsorption, adsorptionaof, aofceramic, ceramiccontamination, contaminationfluorine
Enhanced screening of PFAS compounds in wastewater: Implementing U.S. EPA Method 1621 with improved combustion-ion chromatography
2025|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Application note | 003774 Environmental Enhanced screening of PFAS compounds in wastewater: Implementing U.S. EPA Method 1621 with improved combustion-ion chromatography Authors Introduction Terri Christison and Neil Rumachik Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) is the collective name for over 14,000…
Key words
cindion, cindioncombustion, combustionwastewater, wastewaterrse, rsescientific, scientificstandard, standardfluoride, fluoridethermo, thermopond, pondadsorbable, adsorbableinuvion, inuvionwater, wateradsorption, adsorptiongac, gacmbs