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Dr. Paul N. Boothe Senior Scientist Albion Environmental College Station, TX

U.S. EPA REGION SIX & OKLAHOMA & ARKANSAS DEPARTMENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY 24 th ANNUAL PRETREATMENT ASSOCIATION WORKSHOP HOW TO IMPLEMENT A BULLETPROOF CLEAN MERCURY MONITORING PROGRAM 14 August 2008 Oklahoma City, OK. Dr. Paul N. Boothe Senior Scientist Albion Environmental

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Dr. Paul N. Boothe Senior Scientist Albion Environmental College Station, TX

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  1. U.S. EPA REGION SIX & OKLAHOMA & ARKANSAS DEPARTMENTS OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY24th ANNUAL PRETREATMENT ASSOCIATION WORKSHOPHOW TO IMPLEMENT A BULLETPROOF CLEAN MERCURY MONITORING PROGRAM14 August 2008Oklahoma City, OK Dr. Paul N. BootheSenior ScientistAlbion Environmental College Station, TX

  2. PRESENTATION OUTLINE • Clear trend toward increasing use of lower Minimum Quantification Limits (MQL’s) in support of NPDES permitting • What does this trend mean to you? • How to set-up an effective implementation program incorporating lowered MQL’s • Use low-level mercury as an example • Focus on method compliant valid data reporting • Conclusions

  3. “THE HANLON MEMO” “… in the light of existing regulatory requirements for NPDES permitting, only the most sensitive methods such as Methods 1631E and 245.7 are appropriate in most instances for use in deciding whether to set a permit limitation for mercury and for sampling and analysis of mercury pursuant to the monitoring requirements within a permit.” James A. Hanlon, Director EPA Office of Wastewater Management August 23,2007

  4. “THE HOSCH MEMO” EPA Region 6 has “… revised the MQL’s (Minimum Quantification Levels) which we will be accepting for EPA issued permits. … Region 6 expects that you (delegated States) will revise your procedures to incorporate these revised MQL’s” into your permitting procedures. Claudia V. Hosch, Chief EPA Region 6 NPDES Permits and TMDL’s Branch February 8, 2008

  5. REVISED EPA REGION 6 MQL’s

  6. WHO IS ALBION ENVIRONMENTAL? • One of the most experienced low-level mercury & metals laboratories in the U.S. • Helped the EPA “write the book” on clean sampling and analysis • Acknowledged by name as significant contributor to EPA 1631E, 1638 (ICP-MS) and other “1600 series” clean methods • Participated in validation studies for EPA 245.7 & 1638 • “Re-writing the book” on dissolved Hg & metals filtration • One of the most inter-calibrated labs • NELAC PT samples plus USGS, LAMPS, EPA split sample studies, etc. • AE frequently supplies clean Hg & metals sampling equipment to the U.S. EPA Office of Water in support of new national rulemaking initiatives

  7. LOWER MQL’s- SO WHAT? • Increased use of clean sampling procedures to collect contamination-free samples • Increased use of clean (low-detection limit) analytical methods • Increased cost • Cost can be moderate if implement smartly • Permitees will have to take a more active role in data QC and data validation • Region 6 and States can help by collaborating to provide good implementation guidance

  8. BULLETPROOF IMPLEMENTATION • Goal is accurate, method compliant and valid data at lower MQL’s • Use low-level Hg as example • Starts with useful implementation guidance • Method selection • Specific method recommendations: • Digestion procedures as an example • EPA 1631E guidance daunting • Permittes need guidance they can use

  9. CLEAN METALS & MERCURY CHEMISTRY • Comprehensive field and laboratory quality assurance (QA) procedures and samples • Clean sampling and storage procedures • Clean, sensitive analytical methods • Focuses on data accuracy

  10. OPTIMAL SAMPLING PROCEDURE • Use in-house personnel who are interested in the challenge • Powder-free gloves (multiple easy change) • Ground cover • Clean outer clothes • CleanBox • Don’t skimp on field blanks or field dups • Field blanks exactly same as samples • Don’t sample in the rain • Ground shipping

  11. EPA METHOD 1631E • Low-level mercury • Purge & trap/ Cold vapor atomic fluorescence • Reporting limit (ML) 0.0005 ppb • Approved for CWA use November 2002 • Driven by Great Lakes Initiative (WQC 1.3 pptr) and National Toxics Rule (WQC 12 pptr) • Rigorous and difficult clean method to perform • Ease of contamination at sub-pptr level is great • Good results achievable using good equipment and guidance

  12. EPA METHOD 245.7 • “New, alternative low-level Hg method • Cold Vapor Atomic Fluorescence • Direct method- no gold traps • MDL 1.8 pptr & ML 5 pptr (ng/L) • Validation study conducted 2001 • Albion Environmental 1 of 7 labs submitting validation data plus referee laboratory (Total 8 labs) • AMSA petitioned EPA to promulgate 245.7 • Approved for 40 CFR Part 136 use by Method Update Rule effective 4-12-2007

  13. EPA 1631E vs 245.7

  14. EPA 245.7 INFERIOR TO 1631E • EPA 245.7 more prone to interferences • Tendency to underestimate true Hg concentration • Cause is quenching from air, O2, organics not removed by Nafion (Perma-Pure) permeation dryer • Low recovery is matrix dependent and varies on a sample by sample basis. • All standard QC passes. Only see poor recovery with MS/MSD • Have to perform MS/MSD on every sample matrix • Validation Study: • Several labs for low samples reported ND when true value was more than twice the MDL of 1.8 ng/L • In many cases, the results reported were even less than the spike additions. • Very poor performance on elevated chloride (seawater) and industrial wastewaters • EPA 245.7 data more variable due to interferences • Wide spread of data in Validation Study (4 of 7 labs outliers) • Enhanced variability related to interferences varying from sample to sample

  15. EPA 245.7 INFERIOR TO 1631E • 245.7 not really cheaper than 1631E • Higher gas usage • Nafion tubes high maintenance item • Consensus in scientific community 1631E more robust and reliable • Most research labs and many State labs have stopped using EPA 245.7 in favor of automated, flow-injection EPA 1631E

  16. EPA 1631E GUIDANCE • Method 1631, Revision E: Mercury in Water by Oxidation, Purge and Trap, and Cold Vapor Atomic Fluorescence Spectrometry. EPA-821-R-02-019. EPA Office of Water, Engineering Analysis Division, Washington, DC. November 23, 2002. • Guidance for Implementation and Use of EPA Method 1631 for the Determination of Low-Level Mercury (40 CFR part 136). EPA 821-R-01-023. EPA Office of Water, Engineering Analysis Division, Washington, DC. March 2001 • www.epa.gov/waterscience/methods

  17. DIGESTION OF MERCURY SAMPLES • Limited use EPA Alternate Test Procedure (ATP) N0-0025 12-8-2005 • Preparation of aqueous samples by microwave for the analysis of total mercury by ICP-MS. • Granted to City of Portland, OR

  18. MERCURY DIGESTIONS DATA COMPARISONS

  19. Heated vs Unheated Mercury Digestions

  20. BETWEEN A ROCK & A HARD PLACE “…only sample results that are associated with QC requirements in Method 1631 may be reported or used for permitting or regulatory compliance purposes.” EPA 1631E Implementation Guidance page 5-18 • Applies “in spades” to all clean methods

  21. BETWEEN A ROCK & A HARD PLACE (Con’t) • EPA 1631E FULL METHOD COMPLIANCE CHALLENGING • Is a rigorous, onerous and difficult method to perform according to EPA guidance • From our experience full method compliance is poor in most commercial labs • Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR) “Catch 22” • Permittee responsible for submitting valid data

  22. FOLLOW THE METHOD • Must tell the permittee how to insure reporting of valid data • What lab data do they need to validate data? • For EPA 1631E two major QA/QC issues: • Acceptable field blanks • For every sampling point and report to MDL • Batch specific AND DISCHARGE (MATRIX) SPECIFIC matrix spikes/MS duplicates • Frequency & spiking level

  23. FOLLOW THE METHOD (Con’t) • Other QA/QC: • Equipment blanks (bottle and sampler) • Field QA: Field duplicates • Required Lab QA/QC: Method blanks, reagent blanks, quality check samples, • Instrument calibration • Optional Lab QA/QC: Laboratory duplicate, blank spikes, certified reference materials

  24. CONCLUSIONS • Clean Hg and metals methods coming into wider use in NPDES permitting • Use EPA 1631E not EPA 245.7 • Report 1631E at MQL of 5 pptr if necessary • Provide detailed, usable implementation guidance • Guidance on optimal implementation of clean sampling procedures • Specific recommendations about method implementation • Specific guidance on how to evaluate method compliance and valid data

  25. QUESTIONS? Paul N. Boothe, PhD.ALBION ENVIRONMENTAL4505 Boyett StreetBryan, TX 77801-4614(979) 268-2677 pboothe@albionenv.com

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