API Publ 4636-1995: Analytical Protocol for BTEX and Volatile Aromatic Compounds in Environmental Matrices

Comprehensive guide to the scope, technical specifications, and quality assurance requirements of the 1995 API environmental method for gasoline-range organics analysis

Scope and Field of Application

API Publ 4636-1995, issued by the American Petroleum Institute (API), defines an analytical method for the determination of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes (BTEX) as well as other volatile aromatic hydrocarbons in water, aqueous leachates, and soil matrices. The method employs purge-and-trap (P&T) extraction coupled with gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and is intended for low-level monitoring of gasoline range organics (GRO) in environmental samples, particularly at petroleum release sites.

Originally published in 1995 as a scanned document, API Publ 4636 remains a widely referenced protocol for baseline contamination studies, vapor intrusion assessments, and regulatory compliance monitoring. It applies to drinking water, groundwater, surface water, and soil (including high-moisture and low-moisture solids). The method is calibrated for quantitation in the low microgram-per-liter (μg/L) range for aqueous samples and microgram-per-kilogram (μg/kg) range for soil.

Tip: API Publ 4636 is compatible with later EPA SW-846 methods (e.g., 5030, 5035, 8260) but predates some quality system requirements. When used for litigation or regulatory reporting, supplementary quality assurance measures may be necessary.

Technical Requirements

Sample Collection and Preservation

Strict sampling protocols are mandatory. Water samples must be collected in 40 mL volatile organic analysis (VOA) vials with zero headspace and preserved to a pH < 2 with hydrochloric acid or equivalent. Soil samples are collected into pre-weighed VOA vials containing sodium bisulfate for preservation and stored at 4°C ± 2°C. The maximum holding time for water and soil samples is 14 days from collection to analysis; however, unpreserved aqueous samples must be analyzed within 7 days.

Analytical Procedure

The sample is purged with an inert gas (helium or nitrogen) in a closed-loop purge-and-trap concentrator. Volatile analytes are trapped on a sorbent micro-column (typically Tenax or silica gel) at ambient temperature. The trap is rapidly heated and backflushed with carrier gas to transfer the analytes to a GC column. Separation is achieved on a 30 m × 0.32 mm ID capillary column (1.8 μm film thickness, 6% cyanopropyl-phenyl / 94% dimethylpolysiloxane phase). Mass spectrometric detection uses full scan or selected ion monitoring (SIM) for lower detection limits.

Method Detection Limits (MDLs) for Target Compounds
AnalyteWater MDL (μg/L)Soil MDL (μg/kg)
Benzene0.050.5
Toluene0.080.8
Ethylbenzene0.101.0
m,p-Xylene0.151.5
o-Xylene0.101.0
Total Xylenes0.252.5

Internal standards (e.g., fluorobenzene, 1,4-difluorobenzene, chlorobenzene-d5) must be added to every sample, standard, and blank to correct for instrument variations. Surrogates (e.g., 4-bromofluorobenzene, dibromofluoromethane) are required for each sample to monitor extraction efficiency and matrix effects.

Warning: All calibration standards must be prepared in analyte-free water (or a matrix-matching solvent for solids) and analyzed at a minimum of five calibration levels. The relative standard deviation (RSD) of response factors should be ≤ 20% or a quadratic fit may be used.

Implementation and Compliance

Laboratories adopting API Publ 4636-1995 must establish and maintain documented quality systems. Key implementation requirements include:

  • Initial Calibration Verification (ICV) – A second-source standard analyzed at the beginning of each analytical batch; recovery limits 80–120%.
  • Continuing Calibration Verification (CCV) – A mid-level standard analyzed every 12 hours; recovery limits 80–120%.
  • Method Blanks – One per batch of up to 20 samples, containing no target analytes above the MDL.
  • Laboratory Control Sample (LCS) – Known spiked matrix, recovery within method-determined control limits.
  • Matrix Spike / Matrix Spike Duplicate (MS/MSD) – Evaluates bias and precision in the specific sample matrix.
Proven Performance: When the method is strictly followed with modern instrumentation, MDLs can approach 0.02 μg/L in water, consistent with data quality objectives for groundwater remediation monitoring programs.

Acceptance Criteria and Data Reporting

The standard outlines acceptance criteria for retention time windows (± 0.3 seconds of calibration midpoint), mass spectral tuning (BFB tuning check per criteria), and surrogate recovery (70–130%). Results are reported in μg/L for water (reporting limit typically ≥ MDL) and μg/kg dry weight for soil. Concentrations exceeding the calibration range must be diluted and re-analyzed.

Critical: API Publ 4636 was developed prior to many current quality system standards (e.g., ISO 17025). Laboratories using this method should cross-reference acceptance criteria with their accreditation body’s requirements, particularly for detection limit studies and blind duplicate analysis.

Quality Assurance and Control

Rigorous quality control is central to demonstrating data defensibility under API Publ 4636. The standard prescribes the following QC schedule per analytical batch (maximum 20 samples):

  • One method blank
  • One LCS (spiked with all target analytes at 20 μg/L or 40 μg/kg)
  • One MS/MSD pair (when sufficient sample volume or mass is available)
  • One field duplicate (if applicable to the sampling plan)

Surrogate recovery limits are defined in the method tables; however, laboratories are encouraged to generate site- or matrix-specific control limits after a minimum of 20 data points. The method also requires demonstration of initial precision and recovery (IPR) by analyzing four replicates of a spiked blank and calculating the mean recovery and standard deviation.

Common Interferences and Mitigation

Possible interferences include carryover from high-level samples, contamination from the purge gas or tubing, and background from non-target hydrocarbons in petroleum waste samples. The method recommends the use of clean, dedicated sample collection equipment, inclusion of trip blanks and field blanks, and periodic analysis of laboratory- blank spiked with potential interferents (e.g., acetone, methylene chloride) to confirm separation.

Tip: To minimize matrix suppression in soil samples, use the heated purge-and-trap system described in API method 4636 rather than a direct injection technique. Ensure that purge vessels are maintained at 40°C for soil analysis to improve recovery of less volatile aromatics.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can API Publ 4636-1995 be used for air samples?
A: No, this method is explicitly intended for water and soil. For air monitoring of volatile aromatics, consult EPA Method TO-14A/TO-15 (canister sampling) or NIOSH methods (sorbent tubes).
Q: Is API 4636 still considered a current method by regulatory agencies?
A: Many states recognize it as a valid alternative to SW-846 Method 8260B, especially for BTEX-specific studies. However, always verify with the overseeing agency because some jurisdictions require more recent method editions or additional quality parameters.
Q: How does the detection limit compare with modern instrumentation?
A: When implemented on a modern GC/MS system with a cryofocusing inlet and SIM detection, the method has been demonstrated to achieve MDLs below 0.02 μg/L for benzene—consistent with even the most stringent drinking water standards.
Q: Are there specific training requirements for analysts using this method?
A: API Publ 4636 does not prescribe training per se, but standard laboratory practice requires documented competency in purge-and-trap sample introduction, GC/MS tuning, and data quantification. Analysts must demonstrate initial proficiency by analyzing a set of four LCS replicates per method.

Last updated: 2026. This article is based on the 1995 scanned edition of API Publication 4636 and does not replace the original document. Practitioners should obtain the official API publication for complete procedural details.

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