In the past 20 years, sulfur hexafluoride (SF) has been considered a highly reliable tracer for assessing modern water (< 65 yrs old) in groundwater. However, modern-air contamination may introduce complications in interpreting data obtained using current sampling methods. A new airtight methodology isolates the sample from modern ambient air; thus, returning more reproducible and reliable results when compared to two traditional (air-sensitive and non-airtight) methods. The new airtight method returned results within 0.03-0.05 fmol/L SF of expected SF concentration for pre-modern waters (0.02-0.09±0.01 fmol/L). In contrast, the air-sensitive and non-airtight traditional methods returned results within 0.00-0.90 fmol/L and 0.02-1.21 fmol/L of the expected value, respectively. It is suspected that transformers in proximity to wells leak SF which subsequently partitions into the samples obtained using traditional air-sensitive and non-airtight methods, thus creating erratic SF results.•Comparative analyses of a new airtight method with traditional methods were performed and returned lower SF concentrations with the new 2022 airtight method.•The new airtight method shows reproducible low-level detection of SF concentrations and may reduce sampling error in production wells in urban areas that are co-located with transformers which are SF-emitting sources.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11732182 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mex.2024.103120 | DOI Listing |
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