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Top Four Toxic Metals in Water: Facts and Testing

wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS

Analyzing the metals in our environmental waters is important because many heavy metals pose a serious threat to our health. Among the WHO’s 10 chemicals of major Public Health concern, four are metal or metalloid: arsenic (metalloid), cadmium, lead, and mercury. Because of their toxicity, they are also listed in the National Primary Drinking Water Regulations. You may be familiar with them, but do you know the following facts?

analysis of heavy trace metalsFacts on Heavy Metals

 

 

    • Inorganic arsenic is very toxic, causing severe problems, while organic arsenic is excreted from the body quickly without harm.

 

    • Long-term exposure to inorganic arsenic causes skin pigmentation change and lesions and eventually can lead to cancer.

 

    • Cadmium targets mainly the kidneys to cause renal diseases and stays in our body with a half-life of 10 to 35 years.

 

    • Smoking is a major source of cadmium intake.

 

 

    • Children absorb four to five times as much lead as adults; children who ingest lead may suffer from neural diseases and anemia.

 

    • Both elemental mercury and methyl mercury are toxic; coal-fired power plants and methylmercury from fish and shellfish are two important sources of mercury.

 

    • Mercury stays in the air for one year but can be stable in ocean sediments for millions of years.



Monitoring Heavy Trace Metals: Contaminant Regulatory Standard and Analytical Methods


How do we test trace metals in our environment? As routine practice, atomic spectrometry technologies, including atomic absorption spectrometry (AA), inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES), and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS), are often used because they provide the sensitivity various global regulations require.

For trace metals in drinking water, the U.S. EPA approved the following methods:

Arsenic (Maximum Contaminant Limit, MCL=10 ppb):

    • EPA Method 200.5 (ICP-OES axial view)

 

    • EPA Method 200.8 (ICP-MS)

 

    • EPA Method 200.9 (Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption, GFAA)



Cadmium (MCL=5 ppb):

    • EPA Method 200.5

 

    • EPA Method 200.7 (ICP-OES)

 

    • EPA Method 200.8

 

    • EPA Method 200.9



Lead (action level, AL=15 ppb):

    • EPA Method 200.5

 

    • EPA Method 200.8

 

    • EPA Method 200.9



Mercury (MCL=2 ppb):

    •  (cold vapor atomic absorption)

 

    • EPA Method 200.8



As you can see, the ICP-OES technique using either the 200.5 or the 200.7 method is not approved for mercury analysis. Although mercury is listed in the analytes table in EPA Method 200.7 (downloadable PDF), mercury has a low MCL that is close to the detection limit for ICP-OES. In addition, sample preparation using above methods may evaporate mercury and lead to underestimate of the detection results. Because mercury has highly volatile, EPA Method 245.1 (downloadable PDF) using cold vapor absorption technique (downloadable application note for mercury analysis) is a preferred choice.

In addition, EPA Method 200.7 is approved for use only with cadmium testing when the preconcentration method may have to be used to get the lower detection limit to meet the MCL requirement. The question then becomes, why Method 200.5 is approved for these metals (except for mercury) but not Method 200.7? When the currently recommended version 4.4 of Method 200.7 was developed in 1994, the plasma axial view technology of ICP-OES had not been developed. When Method 200.5 was developed in 2003, the axial view technology was applied to detect trace metals with low MCL, such as arsenic, lead, and cadmium.

With addition of the axial view, Method 200.7 can also be used to analyze water samples based on the EPA’s Guidelines Establishing Test Procedures for the Analysis of Pollutants Under the Clean Water Act . However, because the low MCL of these metals is close to the detection limit of ICP-OES, using Method 200.8 (downloadable PDF) is preferred. In Method 200.8, Collision Cell Technology (CCT) applied to ICP-MS has commonly been used to remove polyatomic interferences and lower the detection limit for different type of waters. But CCT has not been approved for drinking water analysis.

As mentioned above, for arsenic and mercury, only certain species are toxic (inorganic arsenic, elemental mercury, and methylmercury). Speciation analysis should be done to make sure we know if the toxic species are present in our water or food. One effective speciation technique is to couple ion chromatography with ICP-MS.

Resources Supporting Methods for Heavy Metal Analysis


We have several EPA-method specific applications that can be used for the analysis of heavy metals in water:

 

 

 

 

 



You might also want to download this PDF that provides a guide for metal testing methods for drinking water and application notes: Solutions for U.S. EPA Drinking Water Contaminant Analysis.

If you have questions on heavy metal analysis, do enter them in the Comments box below. I look forward to hearing from you.

26 Comments
Not applicable
Would be glad if PDF versions are made available.
sonya-pelia
Team TFS
Team TFS
Hi Akwasi:
Which particular ones are you looking for? All the the links either show an article or download the PDF for you.
Let me know.
Best regards
Sonya
Not applicable
This is a nice presentation and I would share it on my forum for the benefit of others.
Not applicable
Arsenic. My survey's of the drinking water (from both rivers & boreholes) in South America show that arsenic causes a number of forms of cancer, not just of the skin
Not applicable
My comment is that from your piece I am really scared about the worst effect of presence of heavy in drinking water.Human being are susceptible to life threatening diseases due to prolong exposure to sub quality drinking water. I am in water industry and found it is a constant battle and surveillance to keep toxic level
within MCL. Thank God in our source water, we found absence of many toxic substances
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Dear Femi,

Thanks for the compliment. I think we all should pay attention to the toxicity of heavy metals as they are non-degradable, persistent, and mobile. I hope the blog helps us be more alert with what we do to minimize heavy metal contamination from human industrial activities. I am happy the blog is helpful for you and your friends.
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Wayne,

Thanks for the comment. Arsenic uptake may start with skin syptoms, but will cause cancer as well.
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Dear Inamul,

Thanks for the comment. We may be less concerned about these metal contaminants before 1940s and 1950s. Now with more global industrial activities and overmining in developing countries, many heavy metals move to the air, water and soils, we need to regulate the toxic metals to make sure we and our children are away from inhaving and intaking them. In this sense, the EPA has done a great job to make the regulations and monitor the contamiants. I hope we all feel better because of the effort from both regulatory bodies and public water systems.
Not applicable
are there rapid laboratory test kits that can be used to test for the presence of these heavy metals in water as well as determine the actual concentration?
Not applicable
Thanks for your questions. There are testing kits out there for heavy metal testing. I can’t recommend any specific vendors. But I would suggest you do online searches to find out the kits. Here I am using the lead test kit as an example. You can find this EPA page to read more. https://www.epa.gov/lead/lead-test-kits. I also suggest you contact your local water company that provides you drinking water and ask them for information on sending samples for metal testing in certified labs.
Not applicable
what is the laboratory procedure for testing heavy metals in drinking water? is there specific kits or instrument for testing in locallabs?
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Thanks for your question, Vishnu. In the U.S., regulatory compliance testing for metals in drinking water requires approved methods such as EPA methods 200.7, 200.8, and 200.9. Labs need to use the procedures described in these methods for testing. For these testing methods, no kits are used, but instruments used include atomic absorption spectrometry for EPA 200.9, ICP-OES or ICP-AES for EPA 200.7, and ICP-MS for EPA 200.8. There are metal testing kits that area available for home water testing by the consumers, however, if a consumer wants to test their water for lead, for instance. However, these kits are not for regulatory compliance. If you want to get a lab testing for your drinking water for the heavy metals, you can call your local drinking water provider to get a list of the certified labs that can do the tests for you for a fee.
Not applicable
What water doesn't have the dangerous metals like lead arsenic and mercury ?
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Hi Iris, the tap water and commercial water are required by the EPA or FDA to test for these toxic metals and make sure they meet the regulatory standards. But since lead mainly contaminate the tap water through the distribution fixtures and solders in your home distribution system, the lead level at your home tap water may be not the same as the level tested by the public water testing results. It is suggested to test the home tap water for lead periodically or annually. You can request the testing information from your local water providing company.
Not applicable
Hi Dr.Wei , thanks so much for your good presentation about the heavy metal analysis , Iam requesting you kindly to send the techniques on how to use an AAS to analyze these heavy metals because I have the equipment in the Lab but i dont know how to use it. Thanks Iam brian , food chemist at Chemiphar Lab in Uganda.
Not applicable
Hi scientists iam glad to be on this platform
wei-liu
Team TFS
Team TFS
Not applicable
Is this possible to test for and then get rid of Aluminum, Barium and other nano concoctions from water?
Not applicable
can we taste a water after 2 to 3 days of sampling ?? nd if we add only nitric acid so which method?principle we have to apply to test heavy metals like cd cr pb zn co cu ...
simon-nelms
Team TFS
Team TFS
Two or three days after sampling, some elements might have dropped out of solution. Acidifying the sample to a concentration of 1% (v/v) HNO3 (that is, adding the equivalent of 1 ml of concentrated nitric acid to 100 mL of sample) and shaking the sample for a few minutes should bring most elements (such as the Cd, Cr, Pb, Zn, Co and Cu you listed) back into solution. I would however advise that samples are acidified (to 1% (v/v) HNO3) as soon as possible after sampling. There are some elements, such as Sb, that ideally require HCl to also be present as these elements are not stable in HNO3, so depending on your application, you might also need to add HCl to a concentration of 1% (v/v) in the samples.
Not applicable
this was useful for a school project I was doing.
AnalyteGuru_KB
Team TFS
Team TFS
Great! Glad it was helpful, Evie!
Not applicable
Water analysis,ICP-OES
Not applicable
Hi,
I am wondering if you could provide with the conversion of ug to ppm chart. I do not see the compliance when we convert the ug to ppm in a lot of products that I receive from china. Is there an easy way to look up. Thank you.
AnalyteGuru_KB
Team TFS
Team TFS
Hi, here is a calculator tool that might help with your conversions from ug to ppm: http://www.endmemo.com/sconvert/ug_lppm.php
Not applicable
Seeking to investigate Lead in waters such as groundwater, surface and storages. I am Registered Nurse with a passion for Water quality and public Health on the Darling Dwns qld Australia 4350