Kansas Water Science Center
USGS Water Science Centers are located in each state.
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U.S. Geological Survey
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| Multiply | By | To obtain |
|---|---|---|
| liter (L) | 33.82 | ounce |
| gram (g) | 0.002205 | pound |
| kilopascal | 0.1450 | pound per square inch |
| meter (m) | 3.281 | foot |
| Miscellaneous Abbreviations | |
|---|---|
| cubic centimeter (cm³) inside diameter (i.d) mass-to-charge (m/z) micrometer (µm) milliabsorbance units (mAU) milligram (mg) millimeter (mm) millimole (mM) milliseconds (ms) minute (min) nanogram (ng) volt (V) |
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| Abbreviated Water-Quality Units | |
| liter per minute (L/min) microgram per liter (µg/L) microliter (µL) milligram per milliliter (mg/mL) milliliter (mL) milliliter per minute (mL/min) nanogram per microliter (ng/µL) |
A method for the extraction and analysis of eight herbicides and five degradation products using solid-phase extraction from natural water samples followed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry is presented in this report. This method was developed for dimethenamid; flufenacet; fluometuron and its degradation products, demethylfluometuron (DMFM), 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU), 3-(trifluromethyl)-aniline (TFMA); molinate; norflurazon and its degradation product, demethylnorflurazon; pendamethalin; the degradation product of prometryn, deisopropylprometryn; propanil; and trifluralin. The eight herbicides are used primarily in the southern United States where cotton, rice, and soybeans are produced. The exceptions are dimethenamid and flufenacet, which are used on corn in the Midwest.
Water samples received by the U.S. Geological Survey's Organic Geochemistry Research Group in Lawrence, Kansas, are filtered to remove suspended particulate matter and then passed through disposable solid-phase extraction columns containing octadecyl-bonded porous silica (C-18) to extract the compounds. The herbicides and their degradation products are removed from the column by ethyl acetate elution. The eluate is evaporated under nitrogen, and components then are separated, identified, and quantitified by injecting an aliquot of the concentrated extract into a high-resolution, fused-silica capillary column of a gas chromatograph/mass spectrometer under selected-ion mode.
Method detection limits ranged from 0.02 to 0.05 µg/L for all compounds with the exception of TFMPU, which has a method detection limit of 0.32 µg/L. The mean absolute recovery is 107 percent. This method for the determination of herbicides and their degradation products is valuable for acquiring information about water quality and compound fate and transport in water.
This report describes a method that uses solid-phase extraction (SPE) followed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) for the analysis of six herbicides and five degradation products, which are used primarily in the southern United States to enhance cotton, rice, and soybean production, and for two herbicides used in corn-growing areas of the Midwest. This method was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Organic Geochemistry Research Group in Lawrence, Kansas (Thurman and others, 1992; Meyer and others, 1993; Thurman and Mills, 1998; Zimmerman and Thurman, 1999; Thurman and others, 2000).
Reconnaissance studies in the Midwest have shown widespread detection of herbicides. Approximately three-fourths of all pre-emergent herbicides in the United States are applied to row crops in a 10-State area of the midwestern United States where herbicides frequently are detected in surface water (Thurman and others, 1991; Gianessi and Puffer, 1995). Because many herbicides and their metabolites are water soluble, they may leach into ground water (Hallberg, 1989; Thurman and others, 1991; Kolpin and others, 1993) as well as transported in surface runoff (Wauchope, 1978; Leonard, 1988).
Equally important to water quality is the application of herbicides to cotton and rice in the southern United States. Cotton and rice receive three to five times more herbicides per acre than do corn or soybeans. Cotton-growing areas of the United States extend from the East Coast (The Carolinas) to the Mississippi River Delta, the Texas High Plains, and the arid deserts of the Southwest (Arizona and California). These areas of the country have different climate, precipitation, and soil types, which result in different weed and insect pressures, as well as different runoff potentials; therefore, leaching patterns often are different. Because of these considerations, the types and amounts of herbicides applied may vary considerably throughout cotton-growing areas (Coupe and others, 1998; Thurman and others, 2000).
The analytical method described in this report was developed by the USGS to determine concentrations of the following herbicides and their degradation products: dimethenamid; flufenacet; fluometuron and its degradation products, demethylfluometuron (DMFM), 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU), 3-(trifluro-methyl)aniline (TFMA); molinate; norflurazon and its degradation product, demethylnorflurazon; pendamethalin; the degradation product of prometryn, deisopropylprometryn; propanil; and trifluralin. The GC/MS method of analysis described in this report has been assigned the method code "O-2132-99." This unique code represents the automated method of analysis for organic compounds as it is described in this report and can be used to identify the method.
This report provides a detailed description of the method, including the apparatus, reagents, instrument calibration, and the SPE procedure required for sample analysis. Method detection limits, mean extraction recoveries, and relative standard deviations for the GC/MS methods also are presented.
The method described in this report is suitable for the determination of low concentrations (in micrograms per liter) of selected cotton, rice, soybean, and corn herbicides and their degradation products in natural water samples. Registry numbers and molecular weights are shown in table 1 for each herbicide and degradation product. This method is applicable to herbicides and their degradation products that are (1) efficiently partitioned from the water phase onto an octadecyl (C-18) silica phase that is chemically bonded to a solid silica matrix and (2) sufficiently volatile and thermally stable for gas chromatography. Suspended particulate matter is removed from the samples by filtration, so this method is suitable only for dissolved-phase herbicides and their degradation products.
[CAS, Chemical Abstract Service; DP, degradation product; AMID, amide;
PU, phenylurea;
TC, thiocarbamate; PDZ, pyridazinone; DNA, dinitroaniline;
--, not available]
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Class | CAS registery number |
Molecular weight (atomic mass units) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deisopropylprometryn | DP | -- | 199 |
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | DP | -- | 218 |
| Demethylnorflurazon | DP | -- | 289 |
| Dimethenamid | AMID | 87674-68-8 | 275 |
| Flufenacet | AMID | 142459-58-3 | 363 |
| Fluometuron | PU | 2164-17-2 | 232 |
| Molinate | TC | 2212-67-1 | 187 |
| Norflurazon | PDZ | 27314-13-2 | 303 |
| Pendimethalin | DNA | 40487-42-1 | 281 |
| Propanil | AMID | 709-98-8 | 218 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | DP | -- | 161 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | DP | -- | 204 |
| Trifluralin | DNA | 1582-09-08 | 335 |
Herbicides were selected for analysis because of their extensive use in the United States and their importance to studies being conducted by the USGS. The calibration range for the method is equivalent to concentrations from 0.05 to 5.0 µg/L without dilution.
Natural water samples are filtered at the collection site using glass-fiber filters with a 0.7-µm nominal pore diameter to remove suspended particulate matter. In the laboratory, filtered water samples are passed through a preconditioned C-18 column. The adsorbed compounds are removed from the C-18 with ethyl acetate. The eluate is evaporated further under nitrogen. The sample components are separated, identified, and quantified by injecting an aliquot of the concentrated extract into a high-resolution, fused-silica capillary column of a GC/MS system under selected-ion mode (SIM). Compounds eluting from the GC column are identified by comparing their measured ions and retention times to reference ions and retention times obtained by the measurement of control standards under the same conditions used for the water samples. The concentration of each identified compound is measured by relating the MS response of the quantitation ion produced by that compound to the MS response of the quantitation ion produced by a compound that is used as an internal standard. Surrogate compounds, whose concentrations are known in every sample, are measured with the same calibration procedure.
Organic compounds having identical mass characteristic ions and GC retention times to those of the herbicides and their degradation products of interest may interfere.
Following USGS protocol, surface-water samples are collected with a depth-integrating technique at three or more locations across each stream (Ward and Harr, 1990). The water samples from each site are composited in a single glass container or Teflon bottle.
Samples are withdrawn from the compositing container and filtered through a 0.70-µm glass-fiber filter using a peristaltic pump. Filters are leached with about 200 mL of sample prior to filtration of sample. The filtered material for analysis is collected in baked 125-mL amber glass bottles with Teflon-lined lids. Samples are chilled immediately and shipped to the laboratory within 3 days of collection. At the laboratory, samples are logged in, assigned identification numbers, and refrigerated at 4 °C until extracted and analyzed.
Gas chromatograph performance is evaluated by peak shape, internal standard response, and by comparison of response factors relative to response factors obtained using a new capillary column and freshly prepared calibration solutions (a standard curve). An example of the separation and peak shape of cotton, rice, soybean, and corn herbicides and degradation products and internal standards is shown in a total ion chromatogram of a 1.0-µg/L standard solution (fig. 1).
If peak shape deteriorates or if response factors fail to meet the calibration criteria, the injection liner is changed, or maintenance on the capillary column is performed to bring the gas chromatograph into compliance. Part of the inlet end on the capillary column may be removed to restore performance. Specifically, poor peak shape and a loss of response for the herbicides and degradation products susceptible to loss on injection indicate a need for immediate action.
Mass spectrometer performance is evaluated by assessing isotopic ratios, contamination, electron multiplier sensitivity, and abundance.
(1),
RRTc = RTc/RTi,
where RTc = uncorrected retention time of the quantitation ion of the selected compound or surrogate compound, and
where RTi = uncorrected retention time of the quantitation ion of the internal standard (phenanthrene-d10).
See table 2 for an example of retention times and relative retention times.
[min, minute; m/z, mass-to-charge ratio; --, not applicable]
| Compound | Retention time (min) |
Relative retention time (dimensionless) |
Quantitation ion (m/z) |
Confirmation ion 1 (m/z) |
Confirmation ion 2 (m/z) |
|||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Herbicides or degradation products (in order of increasing retention time) | ||||||||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl) aniline (TFMA) | 4.73 | 0.25 | 161 | 142 | 114 | |||||
| Molinate | 14.78 | .77 | 126 | 55 | 187 | |||||
| Fluometuron | 17.05 | .89 | 72 | 232 | -- | |||||
| Trifluralin | 17.95 | .93 | 264 | 306 | -- | |||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | 17.96 | .93 | 161 | 204 | 142 | |||||
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | 18.40 | .96 | 161 | 58 | 142 | |||||
| Deisopropylprometryn | 20.26 | 1.05 | 184 | 199 | 157 | |||||
| Propanil | 21.19 | 1.10 | 161 | 217 | -- | |||||
| Dimethenamid | 21.23 | 1.10 | 154 | 230 | 203 | |||||
| Flufenacet | 23.43 | 1.22 | 151 | 211 | 123 | |||||
| Pendimethalin | 24.20 | 1.26 | 252 | 281 | 162 | |||||
| Demethylnorflurazon | 26.37 | 1.37 | 289 | 145 | 291 | |||||
| Norflurazon | 26.60 | 1.38 | 303 | 145 | 102 | |||||
| Surrogate compounds | ||||||||||
| Atrazine-d5 | 19.00 | -- | 205 | 220 | -- | |||||
| Terbuthylazine | 19.60 | -- | 214 | 229 | -- | |||||
| Internal standard | ||||||||||
| Phenanthrene-d10 | 19.26 | 1.00 | 188 | -- | -- | |||||
(2),
RT = (RRTc)(RTi),
where RT = expected retention time of the selected compound or surrogate compound,
where RRTc = relative retention time of the selected compound or surrogate compound, and
where RTi = uncorrected retention time of the quantitation ion of the internal standard
(3),
DF = (123/123 - Vnp) (123/123 - Va) ,
where DF = dilution factor,
where Vnp = volume not pumped, in milliliters, and
where Va = volume added, in milliliters.
The dilution factor is incorporated into the calculation for determining the final concentration in samples.
(4),
C = [((Ac/Ai) (m) + y) (DF)] x CF,
where C = concentration of the selected compound or surrogate compound in the sample, in micrograms per liter;
where Ac= area of the quantitation ion for the selected compound or surrogate identified;
where Ai = area of the quantitation ion for the internal standard;
where m = slope of correlation curve between the selected compound and phenanthrene-d10 from the original calibration data;
where y = intercept of correlation curve between the selected compound and phenanthrene-d10 from the original calibration data;
where DF = dilution factor as described in equation 3; and
where CF = correction factor.
Concentrations of herbicides and degradation products are reported from 0.05 to 5.0 µg/L without dilution. If the concentration is greater than 5.0 µg/L, the sample extract is diluted (volume increased to approximately 150 µL with eluting solvent) and re-analyzed. If the concentration is greater than 10 µg/L, the sample is re-extracted with a 1:10 dilution (sample:distilled water) and re-analyzed for those compounds with concentrations greater than 10 µg/L.
A reagent-water sample, a surface-water sample collected from Poison Creek in Valley County, Idaho, and a ground-water sample collected from a well in Valley County, Idaho, were used to test the performance of the GC/MS method. The surface- and ground-water samples were collected in 45-L carboys and were split into 123-mL samples. One set of seven samples was spiked with 0.2 µg/L of each herbicide and degradation product of interest, and one set of samples was spiked with 1.0 µg/L of each herbicide and degradation product of interest. In addition, unspiked samples of surface and ground water were extracted and analyzed to determine background concentrations of the herbicides and degradation products. All subsamples were analyzed in one laboratory, the USGS Organic Geochemistry Research Laboratory in Lawrence, Kansas, using one GC/MS system. Each sample set was extracted and analyzed on different days intermittently between sample sets so that comparison of different matrices and concentrations included bias from day-to-day variation. Method recoveries from the analyses are listed in tables 3 through 5.
[µg/L, micrograms per liter; RSD, relative standard deviation]
| ReagentwaterReagentwaterwaterwater Reagent water | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seven replicate samples spiked at 0.2 µg/L |
Seven replicate samples spiked at 1.0 µg/L |
|||||||
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | ||||
| Deisopropylprometryn | 120 | 0.12 | 103 | 0.10 | ||||
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | 111 | .04 | 105 | .15 | ||||
| Demethylnorflurazon | 86 | .04 | 79 | .17 | ||||
| Dimethenamid | 109 | .06 | 98 | .05 | ||||
| Flufenacet | 108 | .05 | 97 | .12 | ||||
| Fluometuron | 101 | .02 | 92 | .09 | ||||
| Molinate | 101 | .05 | 91 | .13 | ||||
| Norflurazon | 83 | .05 | 78 | .15 | ||||
| Pendimethalin | 130 | .08 | 98 | .15 | ||||
| Propanil | 111 | .05 | 104 | .13 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | 90 | .07 | 90 | .17 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | 81 | .11 | 75 | .18 | ||||
| Trifluralin | 113 | .07 | 82 | .11 | ||||
[µg/L, micrograms per liter; RSD, relative standard deviation]
| ReagentwaterReagentwaterwaterwater Surface water | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seven replicate samples spiked at 0.2 µg/L |
Seven replicate samples spiked at 1.0 µg/L |
|||||||
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | ||||
| Deisopropylprometryn | 112 | 0.03 | 96 | 0.16 | ||||
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | 130 | .06 | 125 | .24 | ||||
| Demethylnorflurazon | 95 | .04 | 94 | .18 | ||||
| Dimethenamid | 109 | .02 | 104 | .08 | ||||
| Flufenacet | 127 | .03 | 112 | .06 | ||||
| Fluometuron | 109 | .05 | 97 | .14 | ||||
| Molinate | 83 | .02 | 87 | .14 | ||||
| Norflurazon | 90 | .04 | 94 | .19 | ||||
| Pendimethalin | 90 | .02 | 98 | .08 | ||||
| Propanil | 116 | .04 | 111 | .10 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | 68 | .02 | 80 | .15 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | 95 | .12 | 92 | .37 | ||||
| Trifluralin | 86 | .01 | 78 | .10 | ||||
[µg/L, micrograms per liter; RSD, relative standard deviation]
| ReagentwaterReagentwaterwaterwater Ground water | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seven replicate samples spiked at 0.2 µg/L |
Seven replicate samples spiked at 1.0 µg/L |
|||||||
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | Mean recovery (percent) |
RSD | ||||
| Deisopropylprometryn | 99 | 0.15 | 97 | 0.20 | ||||
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | 139 | .15 | 147 | .32 | ||||
| Demethylnorflurazon | 63 | .07 | 89 | .19 | ||||
| Dimethenamid | 88 | .12 | 108 | .12 | ||||
| Flufenacet | 91 | .11 | 112 | .13 | ||||
| Fluometuron | 100 | .11 | 100 | .17 | ||||
| Molinate | 71 | .09 | 88 | .15 | ||||
| Norflurazon | 63 | .07 | 87 | .18 | ||||
| Pendimethalin | 90 | .12 | 106 | .18 | ||||
| Propanil | 32 | .07 | 123 | .11 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | 65 | .05 | 79 | .18 | ||||
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | -- | -- | 114 | .39 | ||||
| Trifluralin | 90 | .11 | 100 | .19 | ||||
Mean recovery: Mean recovery in reagent-, surface-, and ground-water samples was determined by comparing the mean calculated concentration from seven replicate samples as shown in the "Quantitation" section to the spiked concentration (0.2 µg/L).
Corrections for background concentrations: Neither surface- nor ground-water samples required correction for background concentrations of compounds. All unfortified reagent-water samples also had no detections.
Method detection limits (MDL's): An MDL is defined as the minimum concentration of a compound that can be identified, measured, and reported with a 99-percent confidence that the compound concentration is greater than zero. MDL's were determined according to procedures outlined by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (1992). Seven replicate samples of reagent water fortified at 0.05 µg/L were analyzed to determine MDL's (table 6). Each sample was analyzed on different days during May and June 1998, so day-to-day variation was included.
[µg/L, micrograms per liter; MDL, method detection limit]
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Mean observed concentration (µg/L) |
Standard deviation (µg/L) |
MDL (µg/L) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deisopropylprometryn | 0.05 | 0.01 | 0.02 |
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | .05 | .02 | .05 |
| Demethylnorflurazon | .03 | .01 | .04 |
| Dimethenamid | .04 | .01 | .03 |
| Flufenacet | .05 | .01 | .04 |
| Fluometuron | .04 | .01 | .03 |
| Molinate | .03 | .01 | .03 |
| Norflurazon | .03 | .01 | .03 |
| Pendimethalin | .04 | .01 | .03 |
| Propanil | .05 | .01 | .04 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | .05 | .01 | .03 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU)¹ | .16 | .11 | .32 |
| Trifluralin | .03 | .01 | .02 |
blankblankblansblankbl ¹TFMPU was analyzed using a fortified concentration of 0.2 microgram per liter.
The MDL was calculated using the following equation:
(5),
MDL = (S) (t(n-1, 1-a=0.99) ) ,
where S = standard deviation of the replicate analyses, in micrograms per liter, at the spiked concentration;
where t(n-1, 1-a=0.99) = Student's t value for the 99-percent confidence level with n-1 degrees of freedom (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1992); and
where n = number of replicate analyses.
The estimated MDL's ranged from 0.02 to 0.32 µg/L (table 6 above). According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (1992) procedure, the fortified concentrations should be no more than five times the estimated MDL. The fortified concentrations were within five times the MDL.
Standard deviation: Standard deviations for replicate concentrations in reagent-, surface-, and ground-water samples were determined for all compounds.
Absolute recovery: Absolute recovery of each compound was determined by comparing eight replicate samples processed using this procedure to solvent spiked with the compounds injected directly into the GC/MS at 1.0-µg/L concentrations. Compound quantitation-ion ratios to internal-standard target-ion ratios were compared. Absolute recoveries are listed in table 7. Absolute recovery is different from the mean recoveries listed in tables 4-6 in that mean recoveries are calculated from an initial calibration curve that is processed in the same manner as the samples, thus correcting for routine analyte losses. Absolute recoveries ranged from 74 to 123 percent, with a mean absolute recovery for all compounds of 107 percent (table 7).
[%, percent]
| Herbicide or degradation product |
Absolute recovery (%) |
|---|---|
| Deisopropylprometryn | 109 |
| Demethylfluometuron (DMFM) | 119 |
| Demethylnorflurazon | 127 |
| Dimethenamid | 107 |
| Flufenacet | 121 |
| Fluometuron | 116 |
| Molinate | 109 |
| Norflurazon | 123 |
| Pendimethalin | 78 |
| Propanil | 92 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)aniline (TFMA) | 111 |
| 3-(trifluromethyl)phenylurea (TFMPU) | 102 |
| Trifluralin | 74 |
| Mean absolute recovery | 107 |
Concentrations of herbicides and degradation products are reported from 0.05 to 5.0 µg/L without dilution. Method detection limits ranged from 0.02 to 0.05 µg/L for all compounds with the exception of TFMPU, which has a method detection limit of 0.32 µg/L. The mean absolute recovery for all compounds is 107 percent.
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