Latest in Field Instruments: Applications for Water Testing

Matthew Sullivan, an environmental specialist in the Field Operations section of the Bureau of Environmental Services for the city of Portland, Oregon, talks to contributing editor Tanuja Koppal, Ph.D., about how field testing, particularly for water analysis, has changed over the years. The testing equipment is now better suited for field analysis, in terms of its size, compactness, and robustness. The newer instruments have also allowed for sampling and testing to be done remotely and in an automated fashion. Overall, field instrumentation is striving to provide faster, cheaper, more robust, and more real-time measurements for routine analysis.

Written byLab Manager
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Q: Can you describe your team and the types of field testing they do?

A: We have a team of nine people with backgrounds in chemistry, biology, environmental sciences, and engineering. Our bureau is in charge of the wastewater collection and treatment for the city of Portland, and we are responsible for sampling and monitoring the streams and rivers. We perform a broad variety of field sampling and testing of streams, rivers, and the groundwater. We also collect samples and monitor industries that discharge waste into the city’s sewage treatment plants and collection systems.

We do a lot of long-term in situ monitoring with field instruments, where the field meters are left to collect data on various parameters for months at a time. For temperature readings, the meters are sometimes left for a year. In situ testing is ideal for most parameters and used whenever possible, because parameters such as pH, temperature, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, turbidity, and oxidation- reduction potential start to change dramatically over time. Metals, on the other hand, do not disintegrate, so we collect the sample and bring it back to the laboratory and have it analyzed. However, if we are interested in the portion that is dissolved versus in the solid phase, we do field filtering to test the dissolved portion.

Q: How do you carry out the testing?

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