As diverse contaminants increasingly threaten our drinking water supplies, water quality analysis has become critical for protecting public health.
Despite regulatory efforts, misconceptions remain, while emerging contaminants like microplastics and PFAS present unprecedented analytical challenges for testing laboratories.
This infographic provides essential insights into the complex landscape of water contamination, from inorganic heavy metals to persistent organic compounds, helping labs navigate global regulations and implement advanced testing methodologies.
Download this infographic to discover:
- The surprising truth about inorganic and organic contaminants threatening water supplies
- How regulatory standards vary across regions and why they matter for compliance and public safety
- Advanced analytical techniques for water quality testing and contaminant detection
MYTH
Boiling water
removes all
contaminants.
MYTH
If water looks clean,
it’s safe.
MYTH
Bottled water is
always safer than
tap water.
FACT
Boiling kills bacteria but
concentrates lead, arsenic
and other heavy metals.
FACT
Most dangerous
contaminants are completely
invisible and odourless.
FACT
90% of bottled water
contains microplastics and
faces less regulation than
municipal water.3
For more information on PerkinElmer’s drinking water analysis solutions, click here.
Want to speak to one of PerkinElmer’s water testing experts? Click here.
References
1. Olson E, Pullen Fedinick K. What’s in Your Water? Flint and Beyond. Natural Resources Defense Council. Published 2016. https://www.nrdc.org/sites/default/files/
whats-in-your-water-flint-beyond-report.pdf
2. Sellers K, Weeks K, Alsop WR, et al. Perchlorate. CRC Press; 2006. doi: 10.1201/9781482275124
3. Mason SA, Welch VG, Neratko J. Synthetic Polymer Contamination in Bottled Water. Frontiers in Chemistry. 2018;6:407. doi: 10.3389/fchem.2018.00407
These
water
analysis
tools provide
everything
water quality
professionals need
to protect human
health.
A Deep Dive Into Drinking Water Contaminants
Contaminants in drinking water can pose serious risks to public health, exposing communities to
potentially harmful substances. To address this critical issue, analytical laboratories play a vital role
by identifying and quantifying these contaminants, helping to safeguard water supplies and ensure
compliance with regulatory standards.
This infographic explores the complex nature of drinking water contaminants in all their
different forms and the analytical approaches needed to ensure water safety.
Inorganic contaminants
Public understanding of water safety often relies on outdated or incorrect information.
Correcting these misconceptions is essential for informed decision-making and appropriate
risk management.
How Safe is Your Water?
Water quality standards vary significantly worldwide, creating a complex regulatory
environment for testing laboratories. Understanding these regional differences is crucial for
compliance and public safety.
Global Regulatory Landscape
BENZENE
CYANIDE
EU regulations represent some
of the world’s most stringent
standards, particularly for benzene,
nitrite, mercury and pesticides.
WHO guidelines often serve as
the global benchmark, balancing
health protection with practical
implementation challenges.
Cadmium is a heavy metal that accumulates in the kidneys
and can cause severe organ damage even at low exposure
levels, with stricter EU limits reflecting emerging research
on long-term health impacts at concentrations previously
considered acceptable.
Benzene is a volatile organic compound and known
carcinogen. It is commonly found near petroleum processing
facilities and in groundwater contaminated by fuel spills.
Tetrachloroethylene (PCE) is a common dry-cleaning solvent
and groundwater contaminant. Regional differences in PCE
limits reflect varying risk assessment methodologies, with
some authorities prioritizing cancer endpoints while others
focus on neurological effects, resulting in threshold variations
of up to 5 times between major regulatory bodies.
Developing Asian economies
generally maintain higher allowable
limits for several contaminants
while gradually tightening
standards as treatment capabilities
improve and public health priorities
change over time.
The EPA establishes comprehensive
standards that generally align
with WHO guidelines while
implementing stricter limits for
several organic compounds.
Cd C2Cl4
C6H6 CnCyanide
Benzene
Benzene
Cyanide Cyanide
Benzene
Benzene
Cyanide
Benzene
Cyanide
Cyanide
Benzene
Benzene
Cyanide
Specific limits are always subject to change as new scientific evidence emerges about
health impacts, and each health authority determines limits based on current scientific
understanding and the analytical methods that are available.
India
China
Australian regulations largely
align with WHO guidelines while
implementing stricter controls on
fluoride and several volatile organic
compounds.
Health Canada maintains stringent
standards that frequently exceed
both EPA and WHO requirements,
particularly for neurotoxins and
carcinogens.
As our understanding of water contaminants evolves, laboratories face new analytical
challenges that require innovative approaches and technologies.
Emerging Analytical Challenges
Spectroscopic identification is needed
to confirm polymer composition and
potential additives
Emerging standardized methods are
still under development for regulatory
purposes
“Forever chemicals” that persist in the
environment and require ultra-trace
detection
Complex sample preparation is
required to prevent background
contamination
Specialized LC/MS/MS techniques can
detect concentrations in the partsper-trillion range
Formed when disinfectants react with
naturally occurring organic matter
Require balanced analytical
approaches to monitor both microbial
safety and chemical risks
Require advanced analytical
techniques due to their diverse
structures, low concentrations and
the complexity of their formation
Microplastics Per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFAS) Disinfection byproducts
Ensuring drinking water resources meet regulatory requirements and are safe for human
consumption requires testing for a wide range of possible contaminants. Using the latest
analytical methods, scientists can easily identify harmful contaminants in water, even at
ultra-low concentrations.
The Future of Water Analysis
Liquid Chromatography-Tandem
Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS)
The PerkinElmer QSight®
Triple Quad LC/MS/MS
The PerkinElmer NexION®
1100 ICP-MS
The PerkinElmer Spotlight™
Aurora FTIR Microscope
Inductively Coupled Plasma
Mass Spectrometry (ICP-MS)
Fourier Transform Infrared
(FTIR) Spectroscopy
Investigate emerging contaminants, such
as PFAS, at low concentrations using LC/
MS/MS.
Identify trace elements using ICP-MS.
Detect the presence of microplastics
using FTIR spectroscopy.
Precision
Sensitivity Reliability
Efficiency
Organic contaminants
Drinking water can contain both inorganic and organic contaminants, each presenting
unique analytical challenges and health risks. Understanding these diverse compounds is the
first step toward effective monitoring and mitigation.
Understanding Water Contaminants
Inorganic
contaminants
are naturally
occurring elements
and minerals
that pose health
risks at certain
concentrations.
They are often
regulated at partsper-billion levels,
demanding highly
sensitive instrumentation.
Many of these inorganic
contaminants can cause
severe health problems,
including:
Organic
contaminants
are complex
carbon-based
compounds derived
from industrial,
agricultural and
pharmaceutical sources.
They may transform
into secondary
compounds during water
treatment processes.
Organic contaminants
have wide spread uses,
increasing the likelihood
of contamination. Examples
include:
Pb
As
Hg
F
LEAD
Brain development issues,
cardiovascular problems
PESTICIDES
Hormone disruption,
neurological effects
ARSENIC
Cancer, skin lesions,
diabetes
PHARMACEUTICALS
Antimicrobial resistance,
endocrine disruption
INDUSTRIAL CHEMICALS
Various toxic effects
including cancer
MICROPLASTICS
Unknown long-term
effects, potential
hormone disruption
FOREVER CHEMICALS
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl
substances (PFAS)
accumulate in the
environment and living
organisms causing longterm health damage
MERCURY
Nervous system damage,
kidney damage
FLUORIDE
Dental/skeletal fluorosis at
high levels
An estimated 18 million Americans
drink water with lead levels
exceeding Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) limits1
Perchlorate (rocket fuel chemical)
has been found in drinking water
across 26 US states2
World Health Organization (WHO)
Canada
Cadmium
Benzene Cyanide
Tetrachloroethylene (PCE)
United States Environmental
Protection Agency (U.S. EPA)
India and China
European Union (EU)
Australia
Did
You
Know
Did
You
Know
Cyanide is an acutely toxic inorganic compound. Despite
well-documented lethal effects, regulatory limits for cyanide
vary, often with stricter limits in regions that have experienced
industrial contamination incidents or have vulnerable water
treatment infrastructures.
The WHO estimates 2 billion people worldwide drink water contaminated with feces.
Did
You
Know
These knowledge gaps highlight the crucial role of analytical testing in providing objective,
science-based assessments of water quality that go beyond sensory perception.
Particles ranging from 5 mm to
nanometers in size require specialized
separation techniques