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Product category: Materials Testing
News Release from: Waters | Subject: Analysis of perfluorinated compounds (PFCs)
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial Team on 24 April 2007

Analysis of PFCs at very low
concentrations

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Waters has announced a research agreement with the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to develop trace level analytical methods for detecting perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) in soil and water.

Waters has announced that it has entered into a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with the US Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) National Exposure Research Laboratory to develop trace level analytical methods for detecting perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) in soil and water The goal of the CRADA over the next three years is to develop methods for the sample collection, storage, extraction, cleanup and analysis for trace levels of PFCs

PFCs are synthetic chemicals used in industries like paper/packaging and textiles/upholstery manufacturing.

Scientific studies indicate that these pollutants are toxic, persistent and bioaccumulative and they have been found to be a global pollutant.

Although research is still evolving, it is thought that PFC's may be linked to liver damage and to developmental and reproductive effects in lab animals.

Moreover, the PFC's appear to remain in the human body for an extended length of time.

Additionally this CRADA will attempt to provide methods to help determine how PFCs are distributed in the environment and how humans are exposed.

Waters Corporation and EPA scientists will develop analytical methods employing liquid chromatography (LC) and mass spectrometry (MS) to measure PFCs at very low concentrations in water and soil.

LC/MS/MS analytical methods are more amenable to PFC analysis than the standard gas chromatography (GC)/MS methods and, due to improvements in technology, are more sensitive.

Joe Romano, Senior Manager of Chemical Analysis for the Waters Division of Waters Corporation, said, "The EPA has an outstanding reputation in this type of research.

Ultimately, the expertise and experience brought by the parties to this CRADA will help develop a means by which to assess exposure and risks to pollutants that pose the greatest health risks to the American public".

Said Andy Lindstrom, Research Physical Scientist with the US EPA's National Exposure Research Laboratory, Research Triangle Park, NC, "This is an important opportunity for the EPA to evaluate state-of the-art instrumentation to help answer the most important questions related to human exposures to the PFCs".

A CRADA is a formal agreement between private industry and federal laboratories that allow them to work together under the Federal Technology Transfer Act of 1986.

The Intellectual Property Management Group, a department of the West Virginia High Technology Consortium Foundation, under a cooperative agreement with the EPA, helped facilitate this partnership.

In February of 2005, Waters Corporation announced a CRADA with the EPA's Region 5 Central Regional Laboratory in Chicago, IL.

The goal of this ongoing partnership is to develop a screening protocol for the detection of about 280 harmful contaminants in drinking water that aren't easily detectable by current methods of analysis.

The purpose of the research is two-fold: 1/ to help local water quality officials and water utilities quickly access and, 2/ respond to acts of deliberate or unintentional contamination of drinking water and provide them with routine methods of water analysis.

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