Science Inventory

EVALUATION OF A FIELD TEST KIT FOR MONITORING LEAD IN DRINKING WATER.

Citation:

Schock*, M R. AND G. K. George. EVALUATION OF A FIELD TEST KIT FOR MONITORING LEAD IN DRINKING WATER. JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION. American Water Works Association, Denver, CO, 85(8):90-100, (1993).

Impact/Purpose:

information

Description:

This article describes a conceptual framework for designing evaluation studies of test kits for the analysis of significant drinking water constituents. A commercial test kit for the analysis of lead in tap waters was evaluated and compared with a standard graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrophotometry (GFAAS) technique. The kit was relatively free of operator bias and had a detection limit of 4 ug/L in spiked deionized water. Above the detection limit of the kit, accuracy was comparable to that of GFAAS when samples were analyzed in triplicate. The relative precision of the kit varied with concentration. The absolute precision of the kit was about plus or minus 3 ug/L from 10 to 100 ug/L. Significant interferences were found for certain concentration thresholds of zinc, iron (Fe(II)), polyphosphate species, and orthophosphate. High concentrations of aluminum and chloride reduced method precision. Several operational changes are presented that improve precision and accuracy of the test kit for field and laboratory use.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:08/01/1993
Record Last Revised:11/06/2008
OMB Category:Other
Record ID: 129050