Device for sampling and detecting volatile organic compounds in water

The present invention discloses a sampling and detection device for detecting volatile organic content in water, comprising a hollow sampler (3) and a gas detector (2) connected to the sampler (3). A side wall of a lower half of the sampler (3) is provided with more than one water inlet channel (1), and a lower end is provided with a gas bubbler (10). Said detection device ensures measurement accuracy and continuity while facilitating in-situ detection.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The present invention relates to the field of detection instruments, in particular to a sampling and detection device for detecting volatile organic content in water.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

Various volatile organic compounds may enter into the environment water bodies such as surface water, ground water, seawater etc. and the production and living water in many ways such as by means of emission, leakage or diffusion etc. The volatile organic compounds will impose unfavorable influence on or potential threat to environment, ecology, safety and health etc. depending on their different properties. Various organic compounds such as aromatic hydrocarbon, aliphatic hydrocarbon and halogenated hydrocarbon are not easily decomposed due to their stable chemical properties. They will penetrate into groundwater aquifers and cause serious destruction to the environment. Long-term contact with such organic compounds will result in human chronic poisoning, induce cancer and also have a direct influence on the reproductive system and nervous system. Therefore, monitoring of the volatile organic pollutants in water gets increasingly important in environment analysis work. The causes for water pollution includes improper treatment of industrial waste water, improper treatment of household garbage, leakage events of petroleum chemical plants and leakage events of ships at sea. As for some leakage events, urgent measures must be taken to cut off the spread of pollution as quickly as possible. Therefore, it is extremely important to quickly determine the pollution situations of the water body. The conventional manner by sampling polluted water source and bringing the sample back to a laboratory for detection obviously cannot deal with various sudden events, and some portable detection instruments usually have disadvantages such as undesirable accuracy of measurement result, high cost of the instrument and inconvenient for carrying.

The difficulty in detecting volatile organic compound (VOC) in water body lies in in-situ sampling and quick analysis. The conventional sampling manner is generally as follows, i.e. after sampling in a vessel, sending it to a laboratory for extraction (e.g., as disclosed in US patent application US2011/094105 A1), enrichment (e.g., as disclosed in US patent application US2001/0003426A1) or purging-and-trapping methods and the like. Obviously, these methods cannot meet the requirements for in-situ test, and the components of the water body inevitably change to some extent due to a longer time interval delayed from sampling to testing. In addition, the subsequent processes such as extraction, enrichment and purging-and-trapping etc. are complicated, quite time consuming and cannot completely reflect/indicate the actual water sample components. Collecting the volatile gas in water by using a headspace method is obviously superior to the situation by using the above sampling method. The U.S. Pat. No. 5,773,713 disclosed the use of a detection method in which a polymer membrane is placed in the detected water sample, VOCs in the water permeate or diffuse through the polymer membrane and are brought out by a dilution gas stream for detection. The U.S. Pat. No. 5,448,922 discloses a gas permeation system which also uses a gas permeation membrane. The method of using a membrane for separation is disadvantageous in that flow of the gas depends on properties of the membrane to a great extent, and is substantially affected by the material, length and cross-sectional area of the membrane and greatly affected by the pressure of the system. Therefore, the reliability is not so high and the structure is so complicated. It can be seen that up to date there is no such a device for efficiently, quickly, portably and reliably in-situ detecting the volatile organic pollutants in water.

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

In view of the above-mentioned drawbacks in the prior art, the object of the present invention is to provide a device for efficiently, quickly, portably and reliably detecting the volatile organic content in water.

In the first aspect of the present invention, a sampling and detection device for detecting volatile organic content in water is provided, the device comprising a hollow sampler and a gas detector connected to the sampler. The side wall of a lower half of the sampler is provided with more than one water inlet channel, and the lower end is provided with a gas bubbler.

The gas bubbler functions to enable the purge gas entering a cavity to be divided into one or more tiny gas bubbles. The gas bubbler may be one or a group of pores or a porous material.

The water inlet channel is small enough so that gas bubbles cannot escape therefrom. These water inlet channels can also be replaced with a slit having a width ranging from 0.1 mm to 5 mm or a mesh plate with a certain pore structure, which can perform the same function. The pore area of the water inlet channel should amount to 3 mm2or higher so that the water body in the sampler can exchange with to-be-detected water body outside the sampler in time, so as to ensure the precision of the measurement result.

Preferably, the device further comprises a gas inlet pipe, a gas outlet pipe and a purge gas intake pump. One end of the gas inlet pipe is communicated with a bottom of the sampler and the other end is connected to the purge gas intake pump. One end of the gas outlet pipe is communicated with a top of the sampler and the other end is connected to the gas detector.

Preferably, the gas outlet pipe is provided with a gas sample collection pump.

Preferably, the gas inlet pipe is further provided with a purge gas purifier. The purge gas purifier is a filter filled with an adsorbing agent and is used to remove the impurities in the purge gas. When the purge gas itself is confirmed as clean gas that does not affect detection, the purge gas purifier may be omitted. The gas outlet pipe is made of a material such as Teflon that does not adsorb an organic volatile gas, such that detected concentration is not reduced or detection time is not delayed because the gas sample is not adsorbed while passing through the pipe, and the next detection result is not affected by desorption of the volatile organic compound adsorbed upon previous detection.

Preferably, the gas outlet pipe is further provided with a gas sample dehumidifier. The gas sample dehumidifier is formed by a casing pipe or laminated tube, wherein the outer tube or the outer layer is made of a gas impermeable sealing material and an inner tube or inner layer is made of a material which only allows water molecules to permeate, such as Nafion, and a water absorbent material such as silica gel is filled between the inner and outer tubes or between inner and outer layers. The gas sample flows through the inner tube or inner layer, wherein a part of the water molecules permeate the selectively permeable material of the inner tube or inner layer and is adsorbed by the water absorbent material filled between the inner and outer tubes or filled between the inner and outer layers, thereby the relative humidity of the gas sample flowing through the inner tube or inner layer drops/fills/is reduced. When the relative humidity does not exert an influence on the whole sampling and detection system, the gas sample dehumidifier may be omitted.

Preferably, the gas bubbler is disposed at a location where the gas inlet pipe is communicated with the sampler.

Preferably, the water inlet channel is a pore or a slit, wherein the pore has a diameter of 0.1-5 mm, and the slit is 0.1-1000 mm long and 0.1-5 mm wide.

Preferably, the lower half of the sampler is 3-100 cm high.

Preferably, the gas detector is selected from a group consisting of a photoionization detector (PID), a thermal conductivity detector (TCD), a hydrogen flame detector, an ion mobility detector, a mass spectrometry detector and a spectral detector. The gas detector mainly functions to identify the components in the purge gas.

Preferably, at an inlet end of the gas detector is further provided with a gas separating means which is selected from a gas chromatographic column. Before entering the gas detector, the purge gas needs to pass through the gas separating means first whereby components of the gas are separated such that the component VOCs in the purge gas enter the gas detector one by one, so as to improve the detection precision of the gas detector.

Preferably, at least one float is further provided on the outer wall of the upper half of the sampler.

The at least one float mainly functions to allow the lower half of the sampler completely under a liquid surface of the detected water body and keep the cavity remain vertical (or substantially vertical), and mainly functions to form a gas sample collection chamber within the upper half of the sampler.

Preferably, the sampler is of the structure of a hollow column-shaped cavity. The at least one float is on the same horizontal section of the column-shaped cavity structure. The cross-sectional area of the column-shaped cavity is 1 cm2-1 m2, and the ratio of the height of the lower half of the sampler to the total height of the sampler is ¼- 9/10.

Preferably, a gas path from the gas sample collection chamber of the sampler to the gas detector is completely hermetically isolated from the external environment, and the resistance of the gas from the inlet to the outlet is relatively small.

Preferably, the gas detector is further communicated with the purge gas intake pump, and a closed loop is formed between the gas inlet pipe, the sampler, the gas outlet pipe and the gas detector.

Preferably, the gas detector is further communicated with the purge gas intake pump. The purge gas intake pump is integrated with a gas sample collection pump. A closed loop is formed between the gas inlet pipe, the sampler, the gas outlet pipe and the gas detector. After passing through the gas sample collection pump, the gas sample dehumidifier and the gas separating means, the purge gas in the sampler enters the gas detector and flows out of the gas detector after detection, reaches the purge gas intake pump via the pipeline, then enters the gas inlet pipe again after passing through the purge gas intake pump, and then enters the sampler again after passing through the purge gas purifier, thereby achieving the closed circulation of the whole gas pipeline. The purge gas intake pump is replaced with a gas pump carried in the gas detector. The whole device, after the integration, is made more compact and smaller.

In the second aspect of the present invention, a method for detecting volatile organic content in water by using the above sampling and detection device for detecting volatile organic content in water is provided, the method comprising the following steps:

1) placing the sampler in the to-be-detected water body, introducing the purge gas into the sampler and then into the gas detector for detection;

2) obtaining concentration of volatile organic compounds in the to-be-detected water body according to detection results obtained by the gas detector and a standard sample concentration curve.

Preferably, step 1) is: placing the sampler in the to-be-detected water body, using the purge gas intake pump to introduce the purge gas into the sampler via the inlet pipe, and then into the gas detector for detection via the gas outlet pipe.

Preferably, the purge gas flow of the gas inlet pipe is controlled slightly greater than or equal to the purge gas flow of the gas outlet pipe, such that the gas flow entering the cavity of the sampler is made greater than or equal to the gas flow pumped from the gas sample collection chamber within the cavity of the sampler.

Preferably, the gas flow in the gas inlet pipe is controlled in a range from 1 ml/min to 10 L/min, and a volume of the water entering the sampler is controlled in a range of 1 ml-1000 L.

The volume of the water entering the sampler varies in response to the height and cross-sectional area of a lower segment of the sampler.

The design is carried out to ensure that the gas in the gas sample collection chamber will not decrease gradually such that the liquid surface rises and even the liquid is sucked into the gas sample outlet pipe, the gas sample dehumidifier and the gas detector. When the gas intake flow at the bottom of the sampler is equal to the gas exhaust flow at the top, the liquid surface in the cavity of the sampler keeps stable. When the gas intake flow at the bottom of the sampler is greater than the gas exhaust flow at the top, the surplus gas enables the liquid surface in the cavity of the sampler to drop to the position of the lower segment of the sampler with pores or slits and thereby escape out of the cavity of the sampler. However, at this time, a procedure of pumping the gas sample from the top of the gas sample collection chamber is not affected. When the flow of the purge gas pump is much greater than the flow of the gas collection pump, partial flow may be branched out from the purge gas inlet pipe.

Preferably, the purge gas is selected from nitrogen, air and inert gases.

Preferably, the purge gas purges the to-be-detected water body in the sampler for 5 seconds-10 minutes (which is a balancing time), and then the gas detector is started for detection (or the detector is started before the purging, and data are read after the data obtained from the purging gets balanced).

Preferably, the purge gas is further subjected to purification treatment before entering the sampler, and subjected to bubbling treatment upon entering the sampler, and further subjected to dehumidification treatment and gas separation treatment after flowing out of the sampler and before entering the gas detector.

The gas separation treatment is accomplished by means of gas separating means such as a gas chromatographic column located at an inlet end of the detector.

The purification treatment is accomplished by means of the purge gas purifier located on the gas inlet pipe.

The bubbling treatment is accomplished by means of a gas bubbler at a location where the gas inlet pipe is communicated with the sampler.

The dehumidification treatment is accomplished by means of a gas sample dehumidifier located on the gas outlet pipe.

The principles of the device and method for detecting volatile organic content in water according to the present invention are as follows: the purge gas blown out of the bottom of the sampler is subjected to the bubbling treatment, the bubbles carry the volatile organic compounds in the detected water and gather in the gas sample collection chamber at the upper segment of the sampler, first enter the gas sample dehumidifier for dehumidification and then enter the gas detector for concentration detection. Gas sealing means are provided at respective interfaces. According to the design of the present invention, the concentration of the volatile gas carried out of the detected water by the bubbling of the purge gas approximates to the headspace gas-liquid balance concentration and in an approximately linear relationship with its content in the water. Before experimentation, the standard sample of the desired VOC concentrations needs to be detected to determine the linear relationship between the VOC gas detection value and the actual concentration. Upon actual detection, the concentration of the volatile organic compounds in the to-be-detected water body can be obtained by converting from the detection value thereof. The lower detecting limit of the device of detecting volatile organic pollutants in the water according to the present invention can be in the range of μg/L level or even lower.

After experimentation, the inventor finds that the detection device as well as the sampling and detection method for volatile organic content in water according to the present invention have the following advantageous effects: it is not necessary to take out a water sample and the sampler may be directly placed in water such that the volatile organic compounds in water may be sampled and then enter the connected detector for detection; water in the cavity freely exchanges with the water in the water body all the time so that the concentration of the detected volatile organic compounds will not reduce along with the successive extraction due to the sampling and thereby the measurement accuracy and continuity is ensured.

LISTING OF PARTS

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS

Embodiments of the present invention are described by the following specific examples. Those skilled in the art can easily understand other advantages and effects of the present invention from the content disclosed by the description. The present invention may also be implemented or applied through other different specific embodiments. Details in the description may be modified or altered on basis of different opinions and application without departing from the spirit of the description.

Reference is made toFIG. 1throughFIG. 3. It should be noted that, figures provided by the embodiments only illustratively present the basic ideas of the present invention, so the figures are only drawn with assemblies related to the present invention not with the number, shape and size of assemblies upon actual implementation. Upon actual implementation, the shape, number and scale of assemblies may vary randomly and the layout of the assemblies may be more complicated.

FIG. 1illustrates a sampling and detection device for detecting volatile organic content in water, the device comprising a hollow sampler3and a gas detector2connected to the sampler3. The side wall of a lower half of the sampler3is provided with more than one water inlet channel1, and a lower end is provided with a gas bubbler10.

The water inlet channel1is small enough such that gas bubbles cannot escape therefrom. These water inlet channels can also be replaced with a mesh plate with a certain pore structure, which can perform the same function.

The gas bubbler10functions to enable a purge gas entering a cavity to be divided into one or more tiny gas bubbles. The gas bubbler10may be one or a group of pores or a porous material. Dividing the purge gas into tiny gas bubbles can increase gas-liquid contact area of the gas entering the sampler, improve the concentration of VOCs in the purge gas and make the detection result more precise.

Specifically, the device further comprises a gas inlet pipe4, a gas outlet pipe5and a purge gas intake pump6. One end of the gas inlet pipe4is communicated with a bottom of the sampler3and the other end is connected to the purge gas intake pump6. One end of the gas outlet pipe5is communicated with a top of the sampler3and the other end is connected to the gas detector2.

Specifically, the gas outlet pipe5is provided with a gas sample collection pump7.

Specifically, the gas inlet pipe4is further provided with a purge gas purifier8. The purge gas purifier8is a filter filled with an adsorbing agent and used to remove impurities in the purge gas. When the purge gas itself is confirmed as clean gas that does not affect detection, the purge gas purifier may be omitted. The gas outlet pipe is made of a material such as Teflon that does not adsorb an organic volatile gas, such that the detected concentration is not reduced or detection time is not delayed because the gas sample is not adsorbed while passing through the pipe, and the next detection result is not affected by desorption of the volatile organic compound adsorbed upon the last detection.

Specifically, the gas outlet pipe5is also provided with a gas sample dehumidifier9. The gas sample dehumidifier9is formed by a casing pipe or laminated tube, wherein the outer tube or the outer layer is made of a gas impermeable sealing material and an inner tube or inner layer is made of a material which only allows water molecules to permeate, such as Nafion, and a water absorbent material such as silica gel is filled between the inner and outer tubes or between inner and outer layers. The gas sample flows through the inner tube or inner layer, wherein a part of the water molecules permeate the selectively permeable material of the inner tube or inner layer and is adsorbed by the water absorbent material filled between the inner and outer tubes or filled between the inner and outer layers, thereby the relative humidity of the gas sample flowing through the inner tube or inner layer drops/falls/is reduced. When the relative humidity does not exert an influence on the whole sampling and detection system, the gas sample dehumidifier may be omitted.

Specifically, the gas bubbler10is disposed at a location where the gas inlet pipe4is communicated with the sampler3.

Specifically, the water inlet channel1is a pore or a slit, wherein the pore is of a circular shape. The pore has a diameter of 0.1-5 mm, and the slit is 0.1-1000 mm long and 0.1-5 mm wide. The water inlet channel on the sampler is small enough such that gas bubbles cannot escape therefrom. These water inlet channels may be replaced with a slit with a width ranging between 0.1-5 mm or a mesh plate with a certain pore structure, which can perform the same function. The pore area of the water inlet channel should amount to 3 mm2or more so that the water body in the sampler can exchange with the to-be-detected water body outside the sampler in time to ensure the precision of the measurement result.

Specifically, the lower half of the sampler3is 3-100 cm high.

Specifically, the gas detector2is selected from a group consisting of a photoionization detector, a thermal conductivity detector, a hydrogen flame detector, an ion mobility detector, a mass spectrometry detector and a spectral detector. The gas detector2mainly determines the gas components and content of the purge gas entering the detector and may output a qualitative or quantitative detection result respectively for components and/or content of the gas according to the type of the specifically-selected gas detector.

Specifically, an inlet end of the gas detector2is further provided with a gas separating means which is selected from a gas chromatographic column. Before entering the gas detector2, the purge gas needs to pass through the gas separating means first whereby components of the gas are separated so that component VOCs in the purge gas enter the gas detector2successively to improve the detection precision of the gas detector2.

Specifically, at least one float11is further provided on the outer wall of the upper half of the sampler3. The float11can keep the sampler3vertical (or substantially vertical) so that the lower half of the sampler3is completely under a liquid surface of the detected water, a stable gas sample collection chamber is formed in the upper half of the sampler3, the liquid surface in the cavity of the sampler3and a total amount of the water in the cavity of the sampler3are maintained stable.

Specifically, the sampler3is of the structure of a hollow column-shaped cavity. The at least one float11is on the same horizontal section of the column-shaped cavity structure. The cross-sectional area of the column-shaped cavity is 1 cm2-1 m2, and the ratio of a height of the lower half of the sampler3to a total height of the sampler is ¼- 9/10.

Specifically, the gas detector2is further communicated with the purge gas intake pump, and a closed loop is formed between the gas inlet pipe, the sampler, the gas outlet pipe and the gas detector.

Specifically, when the device is in an ideal state, the gas intake flow at the bottom of the sampler is equal to the gas exhaust flow at the top of the sampler. The gas path from the gas sample collection chamber12of the sampler3to the gas detector2is completely hermetically isolated from the external environment, and the resistance of the gas from the inlet to the outlet is relatively small. The smaller resistance ensures that the gas pressure in the sample collection chamber in the cavity does not vary greatly such that the VOC content in the purge gas does not vary with the gas pressure, the liquid surface within the cavity of the sampler remains stable and the measurement results gets more precise. When the gas intake flow at the bottom of the sampler is greater than the gas exhaust flow at the top, the surplus gas enables the liquid surface within the cavity of the sampler to drop to a position of the lower segment of the sampler with pores or slits and thereby escape out of the cavity of the sampler. However, at this time, a procedure of pumping the gas sample from the top of the gas sample collection chamber is not affected. When the flow of the purge gas pump is much greater than the flow of the gas collection pump, partial flow may be branched out from the purge gas inlet pipe.

Specifically, the purge gas intake pump is replaced with a gas pump carried in the gas detector. The purge gas intake pump6is integrated with gas sample collection pump7, and their function is performed by the same gas pump in the photoionization detector. The purge gas is not provided from a dedicated steel cylinder gas, and directly employs the purified air in the pipe so that the whole device is light-weighted and compact and can be portably carried to waters suspected to be polluted or already confirmed polluted to detect the concentration of the organic volatile pollutants therein. The whole gas pipeline is a closed loop. The purge gas in the sampler3, after passing through the gas sample collection pump7, the gas sample dehumidifier9and the gas separating means, enters the gas detector2and flows out of the gas detector2after detection, reaches the purge gas intake pump6via the pipeline, then enters the gas inlet pipe4again after passing through the purge gas intake pump6, and then enters the sampler3again after passing through the purge gas purifier8, thereby achieving the closed circulation of the whole gas pipeline. The whole device, after the integration, is made more compact and smaller.

When the sampling and detecting device according to the invention is used to detect the volatile organic content in water, a standard sample concentration curve is drawn first. The standard sample concentration curve may be obtained by the following method:

1) formulating a standard sample solution: formulating various VOCs respectively into water solution with a gradient concentration;

2) detecting the standard sample solution: using the above sampling and detecting device to detect VOC content in the standard sample solution formulated in step 1);

3) drawing a standard curve: drawing a standard sample concentration curve with the concentration of the formulated standard sample solution as horizontal coordinate and with the VOC content in the respective standard sample solutions detected in step 2) as longitudinal coordinate.

Gases that may be detected according to the present invention comprise volatile organic gases such as methyl tert-butyl ether, benzene, tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, vinyl acetate and isooctane.

The VOC concentration in the to-be-detected water body is in a range of 0.1-106μg/L.

Detection Example 1

Detection of Methyl Tert-Butyl Ether (MTBE) in Water

As shown inFIG. 1, the photoionization detector is used as the gas detector, the gas detector is a hand-held type, the sampler is of a cylindrical shape, the float is the fixing means of the sampler and located at ⅔ of the total height of the sampler, the water inlet channel is of a circular shape with a diameter in a range of 0.1-5 mm.

The gas flow in the gas inlet pipe is controlled as 100-500 ml/min, and the volume of water entering the sampler is controlled as 300-800 ml. The purge gas flow of the gas inlet pipe is slightly greater than or equal to the purge gas flow of the gas outlet pipe, the purge gas is subjected to purification treatment and bubbling treatment before being introduced into sampler, and is subjected to gas dehumidification treatment and separation treatment before being introduced into the gas detector. The purge gas purges the to-be-detected water body in the sampler for 0.5-3 minutes, and then the gas detector is started for detection.

Table 1 lists the corresponding results when a sample machine is used to detect methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE) in a standard sample water body. The test is performed in a water pool of a laboratory. After the detecting device gets ready, the formulated MTBE solution is poured into the water pool, the sampler is placed in the water pool for detection, each standard sample is read three times, the reading detected by PID is VOC concentration in the gas entering the gas detector with a measure unit of ppb. The detection results show that the PID reading (namely, VOC concentration in the gas) is in a very good correspondence relationship to the VOC concentration in water, and respective concentration detection results also exhibit very good linear relationship (in the table, Conc. μg/L is the concentration of the standard sample solution). The device even exhibits an excellent linear relationship when used to detect low-concentration (7.4 μg/L) MBTE.

The MTBE standard sample concentration curve can be established from the data shown in Table 1, as shown inFIG. 2, wherein x axis represents the concentration of the standard sample solution, y axis represents the standard sample solution PID reading obtained by detection, and the following standard sample concentration curve equations are obtained as: y=5.7561x+1.8626, R2=0.9971.

Upon detecting the MTBE concentration in the to-be-detected water body, an actual MTBE concentration in the to-be-detected water body can be determined by the standard sample concentration curve equations according to the PID reading obtained by detecting the to-be-detected water body.

Detection Example 2

The device may be used to detect various VOCs. In this example, the same method and device in Detection Example 1 are used to detect specific contents of benzene, tetrachloroethylene, trichloroethylene, vinyl acetate and isooctane in the water respectively, and corresponding standard sample concentration curves are drawn. Detection results of these VOCs are listed in the following Table 2:

The standard sample concentration curves of VOCs can be established from the data shown in Table 2, as shown inFIG. 3. It can be seen fromFIG. 3that detection sensitivity varies with different VOCs. When the types of VOCs in the water are known, conversion may be performed according to the previously-obtained coefficient corresponding to the VOCs. When exact types of VOCs are unknown, the detection result is an approximate total amount of VOCs.

Detection Example 3

The device may quickly in-situ detect the approximate total amount of many VOCs in the water. In this example, the same method and device as in Detection Example 1 are used to detect the total amount of VOCs at different testing points in the wild river water, the specific location is in the vicinity of a sewage drainage outlet of a certain essence factory at a certain river segment, in-situ detection is performed in the river 2 m away from the banks respectively at 10 m upstream of the sewage drainage outlet, 10 m, 50 m and 200 m downstream of the sewage discharge outlet, and each test only needs 2-5 minutes to obtain the detection results. The detection results are listed in the following Table 3:

Data in Table 3 indicate that the device can quickly in-situ detect the total amount of VOCs in the water that might be polluted and it is of a great practical value for routinely and randomly monitoring of pollution, and in-situ quick detection and evaluation of water pollution conditions in the case of water pollution and dangerous article diffusion caused by sudden events such as chemical substance leakage or crude petroleum oil leakage.

In conclusion, the device of sampling and detecting the volatile organic compounds in the water according to the present invention effectively overcomes the drawbacks in the prior art and exhibits a high utilization value in the industry.

The above embodiments only exemplarily illustrate the principles and effects of the present invention and are not intended to limit the present invention. Those skilled in the art may modify or change the above embodiments without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Hence, all equivalent modifications or variations made by those having ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and technical ideas of the present invention should still be covered by claims of the present invention.