Abstract

Ion chromatography has been used to determine inorganic and organic anions within landfill leachates. Two procedures are operated on split samples which have multiple dilutions and vary in sample treatment: gradient ion-exchange chromatography for inorganic anions and isocratic ion-exclusion chromatography for organic anions. Interference between carbonate and organic acid anions using ion-exclusion chromatography is avoided by treatment with octanesulphonic acid eluent. Using ion-exchange chromatography, the presence of valerate, hexanoate and heptanoate is checked (but not quantified) for a subsample which has been treated to remove chloride; these species are then determined by ion-exclusion chromatography. Analysis of certified standards (10 mg/1 certified VFA standard; Supelco, Bellefonte, PA, USA; 20–150 mg/l inorganic anions, ICMIX1-100, Glen Spectra Reference Materials, Middlesex, UK) gives good agreement (within 5% for organic anions except formate, and within 1% for inorganic anions), with R.S.D. values for all anionic species varying from 0.44–2.23.

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