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Comparison of Fiberglass and Other Polymeric Well Casings Part II. Sorption and Leaching of Trace-Level Organics
Authors:Thomas A. Ranney  Louise V. Parker
Affiliation:Thomas A. Ranney;is a staff scientist with Science and Technology Corp. (P.O. Box 127, Hanover, NH03755). He received a B.S. in education from Castleton State College and an M.S. in plant and soil science from the University of Vermont. His current interests are in the development of analytical methods and in evaluating environmental sampling procedures. Louise Parker;is a research physical scientist at the U.S. Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (72 Lyme Road, Hanover, NH 03755–1290). She received her B.A. in microbiology from the University of New Hampshire and an M.S. in food science and nutrition (food microbiology) from the University of Massachusetts. Her research interests are in ground water sampling and material interactions. She is a member of the Association of Ground Water Scientists and Engineers Division of the NGWA and has been active in ASTM subcommittee D18.21 on ground water and vadose zone investigations.
Abstract:This paper contains the results of a laboratory study that was designed to compare sorption of low (mg/L) concentrations of 11 organic solutes by six polymeric materials (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene [ABS], fluorinated ethylene propylene [FEP], fiberglass-reinforced epoxy [FRE] and fiberglass-reinforced plastic [FRP], polyvinyl chloride [PVC], and poly-tetrafluoroethylene [PTFE]).
During this six-week study, ABS sorbed analytes much more rapidly and to a greater extent than did the other materials, and PVC and FRE sorbed analytes more slowly and to a lesser extent than the other materials tested.
As the study progressed, an increasing number of spurious peaks were found in the high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) chromatograms of some of our samples, indicating that leaching of some consituents had occurred. By the end of the study, there were 11 additional peaks in the ABS samples, five in the FRP samples, and one in the FRE samples. Analysis by purge and trap gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) of those samples and of well water samples that were exposed to the casings for 500 hours revealed the identity of some of the leached constituents; acrylonitrile and styrene (components of ABS), chloroform and ethylbenzene (an intermediate in the production of styrene) from the ABS pipe, and toluene, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, and ethylbenzene from the FRP casing.
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