摘要

The purpose of the Water Framework Directive is to ensure the quality of the natural water across Europe. In this context, passive samplers have shown interesting capacities for the monitoring of contaminants in aqueous ecosystems. They allow the measurement of time-weighted average concentrations, overcoming many drawbacks of the spot-sampling techniques known to be expensive and time consuming. However, application of passive samplers such as polar organic chemical integrative samplers (POCIS) for the monitoring of hydrophilic contaminants requires calibration to define compound sampling rates; key parameters to deduce the pollutant water concentrations from the amounts of pollutants accumulated by the device. Unfortunately, sampling rates are influenced by a range of environmental factors; in that respect, a question remains: is it not evident to know to what extent the sampling rates obtained in laboratory experiments can be used in field conditions? The problem can be solved for hydrophobic samplers by using performance reference compounds (PRCs), and an ongoing challenge for POCIS is focused on the improvement of the quantitative aspect of this family of samplers. In this study, potential PRCs have been selected during a specific experiment and their performance was tested in the laboratory under two hydrodynamic conditions. Results revealed a good proportionality between elimination rates of PRCs and sampling rates of chemicals. Afterwards, the application of the approach under environmental conditions was assessed by deploying POCIS in the Arcachon Bay (France) where POCIS-PRC-derived water concentrations appear to be close to the simultaneous grab-sampling results.

  • 出版日期2014-2