Quantitative analysis and stability of the rodenticide TETS (tetramine) in finished tap water

ANALYTICAL METHODS(2014)

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Abstract
The determination of the rodenticide tetramethylenedisulfotetramine (TETS) in drinking water is reportable through the use of automated sample preparation via solid phase extraction and detection using isotope dilution gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. The method was characterized over twenty-two analytical batches with quality control samples. Accuracies for low and high concentration quality control pools were 100 and 101%, respectively. The minimum reporting level (MRL) for TETS in this method is 0.50 mu g L-1. Five drinking waters representing a range of water quality parameters and disinfection practices were fortified with TETS at ten times the MRL and analyzed over a 28 day period to determine the stability of TETS in these waters. The amount of TETS measured in these samples averaged 100 +/- 6% of the amount fortified suggesting that tap water samples may be held for up to 28 days prior to analysis.
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Key words
rodenticide tets,tetramine,finished tap water
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