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Utilities are required to measure TOC concentrations in treatment
plant influents and waters that contain a variety of dissolved
molecules and organic particles. Uncertainties about the analytical
accuracy of TOC measurements are the result of inadequate
proficiency evaluation standards. The three primary research goals
of the project were to: (1) develop total organic carbon (TOC)
standards that can be used with all TOC methodologies to evaluate
performance; (2) determine the ability of different TOC
methodologies to accurately measure TOC; (3) test the ruggedness of
the proficiency standards in a round-robin survey involving a large
number of laboratories. A fourth goal was to determine the
contribution of natural organic particles and suspended organic
carbon (SOC) in the formation of DBPs. In general, all laboratories
performed well in the analysis of an easily oxidized standard,
potassium hydrogen phthalate (KHP). In contrast, several analysts
had difficulty in efficiently separating an inorganic C (IC)
amendment from the KHP standard when a 30 mg IC/L spike was added
to the standard.Averaged over all instruments and analysts,
standards that were solutions were analyzed with 92 9 per cent
recovery, while standards that were particles were analyzed with 55
21 per cent recovery. The project data suggest that particles can
compete with dissolved precursor material in reactions with applied
disinfectants and contribute DBP precursors Originally published by
AwwaRF for its subscribers in 2003
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