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Low-cost field test kits for arsenic detection in water

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TLDR
Though the kits were meant for qualitative assay, the results with unknown concentrations of real samples, when compared with atomic absorption spectrophotometer (AAS) were in good agreement as revealed by the t-test.
Abstract
Arsenic, a common contaminant of groundwater, affects human health adversely. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), the maximum recommended contamination level of arsenic in drinking water is 10 μg/L. The purpose of this research was to develop user-friendly kits for detection of arsenic to measure at least up to 10 μg/L in drinking water, so that a preventive measure could be taken. Two different kits for detection of total arsenic in water are reported here. First, the arsenic in drinking water was converted to arsine gas by a strong reducing agent. The arsine produced was then detected by paper strips via generation of color due to reaction with either mercuric bromide (KIT-1) or silver nitrate (KIT-2). These were previously immobilized on the detector strip. The first one gave a yellow color and the second one grey. Both of these kits could detect arsenic contamination within a range of 10 μg/L-250 μg/L. The detection time for both the kits was only 7 min. The kits exhibited excellent performance compared to other kits available in the market with respect to detection time, ease of operation, cost and could be easily handled by a layman. The field trials with these kits gave very satisfactory results. A study on interference revealed that these kits could be used in the presence of 24 common ions present in the arsenic contaminated water. Though the kits were meant for qualitative assay, the results with unknown concentrations of real samples, when compared with atomic absorption spectrophotometer (AAS) were in good agreement as revealed by the t-test.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Expanding Quantification of Arsenic in Water to 0 μg L−1 with a Field Test Kit: Substituting 0.4% M/V Silver Nitrate as the Colorimetric Reagent; Employing Digital Image Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the blue color value produced when arsine reacts with silver nitrate impregnated test strips and found that the color intensity of the strips observed to be inversely proportional to the concentration of As (III).
Journal ArticleDOI

A critical review of on-site inorganic arsenic screening methods.

TL;DR: In this paper , the principles, advantages and limitations of commonly used colorimetry, electrochemistry, and biosensing methods are critically reviewed, with the performance compared with laboratory-based benchmark methods.

L'arsenic, un poison d'actualité

TL;DR: The toxicite a l'arsenic is a major problem of sante publique affectant de nombreux habitants a travers le monde as mentioned in this paper. But, le but primordial est d'eviter absolument tout type d'attentat.
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Development and field testing of low-cost, quantal microbial assays with volunteer reporting as scalable means of drinking water safety estimation.

TL;DR: To evaluate a low‐cost water quality test for at‐scale drinking water safety estimation in rural India, a large number of samples were negative for chlorine and a number of other parameters were positive for bacteria.
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A new perspective on small-scale treatment systems for arsenic affected groundwater

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a new perspective on small-scale treatment systems to remove arsenic from groundwater for potable applications in low-income communities, and suggest the need to reframe current practice towards commune-scale water treatment systems as an interim step before centralised water supply is available.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the source, behaviour and distribution of arsenic in natural waters

TL;DR: The scale of the problem in terms of population exposed to high As concentrations is greatest in the Bengal Basin with more than 40 million people drinking water containing ‘excessive’ As as mentioned in this paper.
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TL;DR: The evidence assessed here indicates that arsenic can also cause liver, lung, kidney, and bladder cancer and that the population cancer risks due to arsenic in U.S. water supplies may be comparable to those from environmental tobacco smoke and radon in homes.
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TL;DR: It is concluded from the literature that insufficient data exists regarding these effects to allow accurate quantification of leaching rates, and also highlights the need for standardised leaching protocols.
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A rapid colorimetric method for measuring arsenic concentrations in groundwater

TL;DR: In this paper, an optimization of the colorimetric method of Johnson and Pilson (1972) to accurately measure As concentrations in the <0.03 −5.3mol L −1 (<2 −400 gL −1 ) range in groundwater containing 2 −30mol l −1 dissolved phosphate was reported.
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Monitoring arsenic in the environment: a review of science and technologies with the potential for field measurements

TL;DR: The strengths and weaknesses of various field assays are discussed with respect to their sensitivity, ability to detect the chemical states of arsenic, performance in various media, potential interferences, and ease of operation.
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