Standard Methods For The Examination of Water and Wastewater
Standard Methods For The Examination of Water and Wastewater
Standard Methods For The Examination of Water and Wastewater
NITROGEN (NITRITE)*#(59)
4500-NO2- A. Introduction
1. Occurrence and Significance
For a discussion of the chemical characteristics, sources, and effects of nitrite nitrogen, see
Section 4500-N.
2. Selection of Method
The colorimetric method (B) is suitable for concentrations of 5 to 1000 g NO2-N/L (See B.1a).
Nitrite values can be obtained by the automated method given in Section 4500- NO3.E with the
Cu-Cd reduction step omitted. Additionally, nitrite nitrogen can be determined by ion
chromatography (Section 4110), and by flow injection analysis (see Section 4130 and Section
4500- NO3.I).
4500-NO2 B. Colorimetric Method
1. General Discussion
a. Principle: Nitrite (NO2) is determined through formation of a reddish purple azo dye produced
at pH 2.0 to 2.5 by coupling diazotized sulfanilamide with N-(1-naphthyl)-ethylenediamine
dihydrochloride (NED dihydrochloride). The applicable range of the method for
spectrophotometric measurements is 10 to 1000 g NO2-N/L. Photometric measurements can be
made in the range 5 to 50 g N/L if a 5-cm light path and a green color filter are used. The color
system obeys Beers law up to 180 g N/ L with a 1-cm light path at 543 nm. Higher NO2
concentrations can be determined by diluting a sample.
b. Interferences: Chemical incompatibility makes it unlikely that NO2, free chlorine, and nitrogen
trichloride (NCl3) will coexist. NCl3 imparts a false red color when color reagent is added. The
following ions interfere because of precipitation under test conditions and should be absent: Sb3+,
Au3+, Bi3+, Fe3+, Pb2+, Hg2+, Ag+, chloroplatinate (PtCl62), and metavanadate (VO32). Cupric
ion may cause low results by catalyzing decomposition of the diazonium salt.
Colored ions that alter the color system also should be absent. Remove suspended solids by
filtration.
c. Storage of sample: Never use acid preservation for samples to be analyzed for NO2.
Make the determination promptly on fresh samples to prevent bacterial conversion of NO2 to
NO3 or NH3. For short-term preservation for 1 to 2 d, freeze at 20C or store at 4C.
2. Apparatus
Colorimetric equipment: One of the following is required:
a. Spectrophotometer, for use at 543 nm, providing a light path of 1 cm or longer.
b. Filter photometer, providing a light path of 1 cm or longer and equipped with a green filter
having maximum transmittance near 540 nm.
Copyright 1999 by American Public Health Association, American Water Works Association, Water Environment Federation
Copyright 1999 by American Public Health Association, American Water Works Association, Water Environment Federation
where:
A = mg NO2 -N/mL in stock NaNO2 solution,
B = total mL standard KMnO4 used,
C = normality of standard KMnO4,
D = total mL standard reductant added,
E = normality of standard reductant, and
F = mL stock NaNO2 solution taken for titration.
Each 1.00 mL 0.01M (0.05N) KMnO4 consumed by the NaNO2 solution corresponds to 1750 g
NO2 -N.
f. Intermediate nitrite solution: Calculate the volume, G, of stock NO2 solution required for the
intermediate NO2 solution from G = 12.5/A. Dilute the volume G (approximately 50 mL) to 250
mL with water; 1.00 mL = 50.0 g N. Prepare daily.
g. Standard nitrite solution: Dilute 10.00 mL intermediate NO2 solution to 1000 mL with
water; 1.00 mL = 0.500 g N. Prepare daily.
h. Standard potassium permanganate titrant, 0.01M (0.05N): Dissolve 1.6 g KMnO4 in 1 L
distilled water. Keep in a brown glass-stoppered bottle and age for at least 1 week. Carefully
decant or pipet supernate without stirring up any sediment. Standardize this solution frequently by
the following procedure:
Weigh to the nearest 0.1 mg several 100- to 200-mg samples of anhydrous Na2C2O4 into
400-mL beakers. To each beaker, in turn, add 100 mL distilled water and stir to dissolve. Add 10
mL 1 + 1 H2SO4 and heat rapidly to 90 to 95C. Titrate rapidly with permanganate solution to be
standardized, while stirring, to a slight pink end-point color that persists for at least 1 min. Do not
let temperature fall below 85C. If necessary, warm beaker contents during titration; 100 mg will
consume about 6 mL solution. Run a blank on distilled water and H2SO4.
where:
A = mL titrant for sample and
B = mL titrant for blank.
Average the results of several titrations.
4. Procedure
a. Removal of suspended solids: If sample contains suspended solids, filter through a
0.45-m-pore-diam membrane filter.
Copyright 1999 by American Public Health Association, American Water Works Association, Water Environment Federation
b. Color development: If sample pH is not between 5 and 9, adjust to that range with 1N HCl or
NH4OH as required. To 50.0 mL sample, or to a portion diluted to 50.0 mL, add 2 mL color
reagent and mix.
c. Photometric measurement: Between 10 min and 2 h after adding color reagent to samples and
standards, measure absorbance at 543 nm. As a guide use the following light paths for the
indicated NO2-N concentrations:
5. Calculation
Prepare a standard curve by plotting absorbance of standards against NO2-N concentration.
Compute sample concentration directly from curve.
6. Precision and Bias
In a single laboratory using wastewater samples at concentrations of 0.04, 0.24, 0.55, and
1.04 mg NO3 + NO2 -N/L, the standard deviations were 0.005, 0.004, 0.005, and 0.01,
respectively. In a single laboratory using wastewater samples at concentrations of 0.24, 0.55, and
1.05 mg NO3 + NO2-N/L, the recoveries were 100%, 102%, and 100%, respectively.1
7. Reference
1. U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY. 1979. Methods for Chemical Analysis of
Water and Wastes. Method 353. 3. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C.
8. Bibliography
BOLTZ, D.F., ed. 1958. Colorimetric Determination of Nonmetals. Interscience Publishers, New
York, N.Y.
NYDAHL, F. 1976. On the optimum conditions for the reduction of nitrate by cadmium. Talanta
23:349.
Copyright 1999 by American Public Health Association, American Water Works Association, Water Environment Federation