Back
to Library
GCI
TECH NOTES©
Volume
13, Number 1
A Gossman Consulting, Inc.
Publication June 2008
Hazardous Waste Analysis
Volatile and Semivolatile Organic Testing Protocol
by
David Gossman
In 1993 we published a
GC-MSD method for the analysis of volatile and semivolatile compounds in hazardous waste
that continues to be referenced throughout the hazardous waste
management industry, especially in the use of hazardous waste as fuels
in cement kilns. Over the next few issues of GCI Tech Notes we will be
presenting details of how this testing protocol can be implemented,
used and improved upon. This - the first of these articles - will
provide a more detailed idea of how this testing can be implemented in
terms of the protocol that the analyst would use during the actual
analysis of the GC-MSD data. It is important to understand the intent
of this method was to provide a semiquantitative method for identifying
the organic constituents in a waste stream so that a health and safety
evaluation of the waste stream can be performed and so that subsequent
shipment analyses can be compared with prior analyses. For this reason
and to meet these generally stated data quality objectives traditional
methods of quantitation and QA/QC are often unnecessary and can defeat
the purpose of providing this data on a real time basis within the
operating environment of a hazardous waste management facility. The
details of how the data is to be used and the operating environment
within which the data will be analyzed may require modification of this
protocol - in some cases very significant modification. Such
modifications should be consistent with the data quality objectives
(DQOs) established. (DQO development guidance can be found at
http://gcisolutions.com/AWMADG99.htm.)
- All reporting and criteria are based on relative area percents
based on the total chromatographic area (not counting any extraction solvent
peak). Compound specific calibrations are not required as area percent values
are, most of the time, conservatively high.
- Except for n-hexane, straight and branched chain aliphatic
hydrocarbons need not be individually identified. They can instead be reported
as the approximate range of carbon numbers – for example “13% C8-C12 aliphatic
hydrocarbons”. This can usually allow significant simplification for reporting
of a typical waste stream since these compounds often constitute 50-100% of the
smaller individual peaks found in a chromatogram.
- Similarly, alkyl aromatic hydrocarbons with a single benzene
ring can be reported as a group, except for toluene and xylene, which must be
reported separately. An example would be “5% C9-C12 alkyl aromatics”.
- All peaks greater than 0.1% shall be tentatively identified
via computer algorithms. If the analyst confirms the identification of the
peaks they will be reported based on the computer best-fit identification.
- For peaks constituting <1.0% if the analyst does not
confirm the computer identification they may be simply reported as “unknown” so
long as the total of all “unknowns” does not exceed 5% of the total
chromatogram. Alternatively the analyst may identify them based on further
GC/MS library research.
- All individual peaks constituting 1% or more of the waste
sample chromatogram shall be identified initially using the computer
algorithms. The analyst will review these tentative identifications and will
either concur or use his/her best judgment to make a better match using the
GC/MS database, fundamental mass spec data analysis or additional information
(or even samples) supplied by the waste generator as needed. Waste with any
peak at 1% or greater of an unknown compound will not be accepted.
- The above criteria apply to liquid wastes. Since the volatile
and semivolatile organics compounds in solid wastes are unlikely to exceed 20%
of the total, the above criteria increased by a factor of 5 may be used for all
solid wastes so long as area percents of the total chromatogram are used as
described above.