2024 article

Diagnostic screening of private well water using gas chromatography with high resolution mass spectrometry to support well water management

Rudd, H., Ercumen, A., Kane, E., Shea, D., & Nichols, E. G. (2024, August 31). The Science of The Total Environment, Vol. 953.

By: H. Rudd n, A. Ercumen n, E. Kane*, D. Shea* & E. Nichols n

author keywords: Water quality; Drinking water; Reporting back; Chemicals of emerging concern; Suspect and non-target screening
topics (OpenAlex): Toxic Organic Pollutants Impact; Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances research; Pharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental Impacts
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UN Sustainable Development Goal Categories
6. Clean Water and Sanitation (Web of Science; OpenAlex)
Source: Web Of Science
Added: September 23, 2024

In the US, private well users are responsible for their own water quality testing, but local health officials are often uncertain what tests to recommend, particularly for regulated organic chemical contaminants. This study evaluated the utility of suspect and non-target screening (NTS) high resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) as a tool to identify a wide range of organic chemicals of emerging concern in private well water and to inform well water management decisions. Qualitative NTS, which detects chemicals without providing concentrations, was used to analyze 25 private well water samples from Wake County, North Carolina. Using the NIST 20 mass spectral database (M 1 ), NTS tentatively identified 106 unique organic chemicals across the 25 samples and an average of 11 organic chemicals per sample. At least one USEPA ToxCast chemical was identified in each private well water sample. Private well water users were interviewed prior to and after their sample's NTS results were reported back; four county groundwater managers were interviewed after aggregated results for all 25 water samples were reported back. All but one well user participant chose to participate in the reporting-back post-interview. The 24 private well users found NTS results useful and valued the contextualization of their results using NTS results for other well users and a local municipal water sample. Most private well users (67%) were surprised by their well water results, especially regarding the number of tentatively identified organic chemicals detected. All the groundwater managers believed the NTS results were useful and could help improve their testing recommendations to private well users. Even with qualitative limitations, NTS results can be an effective and valuable tool to inform the public and governance stakeholders in decisions around groundwater quality management.