The content presented here represents the most current version of this section, which was printed in the 24th edition of Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater.
Abstract: 4500-Norg A. Introduction

1. Selection of Method

The Kjeldahl methods (4500-Norg B and C) determine nitrogen in the trinegative state. They fail to account for nitrogen in the form of azide, azine, azo, hydrazone, nitrate, nitrite, nitrile, nitro, nitroso, oxime, and semi-carbazone. Kjeldahl nitrogen is the sum of organic nitrogen and ammonia nitrogen.

The major factor that influences the selection of a macro- or semi-micro-Kjeldahl method to determine organic nitrogen is its concentration. The macro-Kjeldahl method applies to samples containing either low or high concentrations of organic nitrogen but requires a relatively large sample volume for low concentrations. In the semi-micro-Kjeldahl method, which applies to samples containing high concentrations of organic nitrogen, choose a sample volume that contains organic plus ammonia nitrogen in the range of 0.2 to 2 mg.

The block digestion method (4500-Norg D) is a micro method with an automated analysis step capable of measuring organic nitrogen as low as 0.1 mg/L when blanks are carefully controlled.

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CITATION

Standard Methods Committee of the American Public Health Association, American Water Works Association, and Water Environment Federation. 4500-norg nitrogen (organic) In: Standard Methods For the Examination of Water and Wastewater. Lipps WC, Baxter TE, Braun-Howland E, editors. Washington DC: APHA Press.

DOI: 10.2105/SMWW.2882.090

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