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Groundwater Systems Commonly used devices include electric submersible pumps, bailers, suction-lift pumps, and positive displacement bladder pumps. Bailers are often used to both purge and sample small diameter shallow wells.
Groundwater samples will typically be collected from the discharge line of a pump or from a bailer, either from the pour stream of an up-turned bailer or from the stream from a bottom-emptying device.
Groundwater sampling is done for a variety of purposes, including meeting regulatory requirements; waste disposal site monitoring; ambient groundwater quality monitoring; research; and general bacteriological and chemical quality monitoring.
Groundwater samples will typically be collected from the discharge line of a pump or from a bailer, either from the pour stream of an up-turned bailer or from the stream from a bottom-emptying device.
Sample bottles must be clean but need not be sterile and preservatives may be required for some analytes. Residual chlorine, pH, and turbidity should be tested immediately after sampling as they will change during storage and transport. Moreover, the time between sampling and analysis should be kept to a minimum.
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Sampling solids in powder or granulated form: The following tools may be used: spear samplers, tube-type samplers, zone samplers, sampling trowels, spiral samplers, samplers for frozen goods, hand-drill samplers, etc. Sampling gases: Sampling require a metal cylinder (sample cylinder) for collection and transport.
Samples for VOC analysis must be collected using either stainless steel or Teflon equipment. A clean pair of new, non-powdered, disposable gloves will be worn each time a different location is sampled and the gloves should be donned immediately prior to sampling.
Pump samples typically are collected with suction lift or submersible pump systems designed to collect water-quality samples. Pump systems can be portable or permanently installed and automated for sampling.

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