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1.
The conventional four-step sequential extraction method and the EDTA and acetic acid single extraction procedures were applied to sewage sludge and sediment samples. The results obtained with these samples for Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn using the Tessier method were compared with those supplied by the two single extraction procedures employed. In addition, the Tessier method was also applied to a reference material, CRM 483, and these results were also compared with the certified EDTA and acetic acid values for this sample. As a result, good agreement was found between the metal contents released in the first three fractions of the Tessier method and those leached by the simpler single extraction procedures for the most of the elements studied. Subsequently, the conventional EDTA and acetic acid extraction methods were accelerated by means of microwave energy, in order to reduce the operating time. The extraction efficiency of the first three fractions of the Tessier method was compared with that obtained using the optimised microwave single extraction procedures and only in sewage sludge and CRM 483 samples were satisfactory results found for all the elements studied, except Cr and Pb. This means that the microwave single extraction procedures optimised in this work could be employed as screening methods to evaluate rapidly the easiest mobilizable heavy metals in these samples, although more samples should be analysed to determine their general applicability. The application of the accelerated single extraction procedures to a reference material, CRM 483, provided satisfactory results for all the elements studied, except for Cr in both methods and for Pb in the acetic acid extracts.  相似文献   

2.
A microwave-assisted continuous-flow sequential extraction system was developed for rapid fractionation analysis of heavy metals in soil. Insertion of pressure-adjusted air between the extractants provided stable flows of the extractants without mutual mixing and back-pressure influence of a column packed with soil, thereby facilitating reliable continuous-flow extractions. In addition, use of pure water as a pumping solvent removed metal contamination because of direct contact between corrosive extractants and the pump containing metallic materials. Focused microwave irradiation to the soil accelerated the selective extractions of the acid-soluble and reducible fractions of heavy metals in soil in the first and second steps of the sequential extraction conditions, as defined by the Commission of the European Bureau of Reference (BCR). The microwave-assisted continuous-flow extraction provided high correlations in amounts of six heavy metals except Zn in the first step and Cu in the second step extracted from a reference sludge soil, BCR CRM 483, with a conventional batchwise extraction proposed by BCR; continuous-flow extraction assisted by conductive heating provided lower correlations for all the six metals. The proposed method drastically reduced the time required for the sequence extraction to ca. 65 min without losing accuracy and precision of the fractionation analysis of heavy metals in soil, whereas the BCR batchwise method requires ca. 33 h. An erratum to this article can be found at  相似文献   

3.
The distribution and speciation of toxic metals in industrial wastewater sludge (IWS) was investigated. In this work, the modified BCR three-stage sequential extraction procedure was applied to the fractionation of Cr Pb Ni, and Cd in untreated industrial wastewater sludge from industrial sites in Hyderabad (Pakistan). The extracts were analyzed using electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. The procedure was evaluated using a certified reference material for soil mixed with sewage sludge BCR 483. The results from the partitioning study indicate that more easily mobilized forms (acid exchangeable) of Cd were dominant. The oxidizable fraction was dominant for all four toxic metals. Metal recovery was good, with <4% difference between the total metal recovered through the extractant steps and the total metal determined after microwave digestion. Lixiviation tests (DIN 38414-S4) were used to evaluate the leaching of toxic species from IWS, and it was observed that levels of leachable toxic metals were low compared to the amount of metal extracted in the exchangeable fraction of the BCR protocol.  相似文献   

4.
Kubová J  Matús P  Bujdos M  Hagarová I  Medved' J 《Talanta》2008,75(4):1110-1122
The prediction of soil metal phytoavailability using the chemical extractions is a conventional approach routinely used in soil testing. The adequacy of such soil tests for this purpose is commonly assessed through a comparison of extraction results with metal contents in relevant plants. In this work, the fractions of selected risk metals (Al, As, Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb, Zn) that can be taken up by various plants were obtained by optimized BCR (Community Bureau of Reference) three-step sequential extraction procedure (SEP) and by single 0.5 mol L(-1) HCl extraction. These procedures were validated using five soil and sediment reference materials (SRM 2710, SRM 2711, CRM 483, CRM 701, SRM RTH 912) and applied to significantly different acidified soils for the fractionation of studied metals. The new indicative values of Al, Cd, Cu, Fe, Mn, P, Pb and Zn fractional concentrations for these reference materials were obtained by the dilute HCl single extraction. The influence of various soil genesis, content of essential elements (Ca, Mg, K, P) and different anthropogenic sources of acidification on extraction yields of individual risk metal fractions was investigated. The concentrations of studied elements were determined by atomic spectrometry methods (flame, graphite furnace and hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry and inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry). It can be concluded that the data of extraction yields from first BCR SEP acid extractable step and soil-plant transfer coefficients can be applied to the prediction of qualitative mobility of selected risk metals in different soil systems.  相似文献   

5.
In the present study, three-step Community Bureau of Reference sequential extraction scheme (BCR-SES) and single extraction methods were performed to assess the mobility and availability of heavy metals (Cd, Cu, Pb, Fe and Zn) in an agricultural soil before and after amendment with poultry waste (PW).The PW samples were collected from poultry farms, situated in Hyderabad Sindh, Pakistan. The extractable heavy metals were measured by flame and electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. The validation of the method was carried out by analysis of a certified reference material of soil amended with sewage sludge (BCR-483). The single extractions using calcium chloride and EDTA, separately, while BCR-SESs were developed to evaluate the available heavy metals to plants and their environmental accessibility for control soil (CS), PW and soil amended with PW (SPW).The pH of the PW and SPW were found to be < 6.0, which may enhance the leaching of heavy metals to agricultural soil. The results from the partitioning study indicated that easily mobilised forms (acid exchangeable) of Cd were higher than other heavy metals. The oxidisable fractions of all heavy metals were dominant in PW and SPW as compared to found in CS samples. The EDTA- and CaCl2-extractable heavy metals correspond to 5.0 to 10 and 0.5 to 3.0%, respectively of total contents in all three solid samples. Contamination factors revealed that the retention of Pb and Zn were higher compared with Cu, Cd and Fe in CS, PW and SPW samples.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

In the present study the concentration of heavy metals (Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn) in sediments collected from different sampling stations of the Leça river (Portugal) was determined, using Flame Atomic Absorption Spectrometry. In order to estimate the potential mobility of metals in these samples, the results of the total digestion were compared with those obtained by single extractions using EDTA and acetic acid as extractant solutions; in all samples studied, Cu and Zn were found to be the most mobile elements; Ni and Pb showed a smaller mobility in presence of either acidic medium and complexing ligands; Cr was found the least mobilizable element, given that the low extractability obtained with the two extractants tested in this work. In the single extraction tests, microwave energy was also employed to replace the conventional treatment and only in the case of the EDTA the results obtained were similar to those of the conventional procedure (recoveries between 90.16 and 98.76%); the precision (RSD, n=3) of the proposed microwave procedure for EDTA extractions was comparable to those of the conventional method with values always lower than 8% for all metals.  相似文献   

7.
A modified three-step sequential extraction procedure proposed by the Commission of European Communities Bureau of Reference (BCR) was applied to certified reference materials of three different soil groups (rendzina, luvisol, cambisol) and sewage sludge of different composition originating from a municipal water treatment plant in order to assess potential mobility and the distribution of vanadium in the resulting fractions. Analysis of the extracts was carried out by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry with Zeeman background correction using transversely heated graphite atomizers. Extracts showed significant matrix interferences which were overcome by the standard addition technique. The original soil and sludge certified reference materials (CRMs) and the extraction residue from the sequential extraction were decomposed by a mixture of HNO3–HClO4–HF in an open system. The content of V determined after decomposition of the samples was in very good agreement with the certified total values. The accuracy of the sequential extraction procedure was checked by comparing the sum of the vanadium contents in the three fractions and in the extraction residue with the certified total content of V. The amounts of vanadium leached were in good correlation with the certified total contents of V in the CRMs of soils and sewage sludge. In the soils examined, vanadium was present almost entirely in the mineral lattice, while in the sewage sludge samples 9–14% was found in the oxidizable and almost 25% in the reducible fractions. The recovery ranged from 93–106% and the precision (RSD) was below 10%.  相似文献   

8.
Chemical sequential extraction for metal fractionation in sewage sludge using the Tessier method has been accelerated by ultrasound. The two sequential extraction schemes (conventional and ultrasound accelerated) were compared in terms of extraction efficiency, precision, treatment time and partitioning patterns of metals. Extractable contents of Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn were measured by flame atomic absorption spectrometry, and the analytical results obtained by the two procedures were statistically compared (P = 0.95). No significant differences were found in the two first fractions (i.e. exchangeable and carbonate-bound), however, in the third and fourth extracts (i.e. Fe-Mn oxides-bound and organic matter-bound) the extraction capability of the two methods differed significantly. Received: 15 June 1998 / Revised: 10 November 1998 / Accepted: 11 November 1998  相似文献   

9.
Chemical sequential extraction for metal fractionation in sewage sludge using the Tessier method has been accelerated by ultrasound. The two sequential extraction schemes (conventional and ultrasound accelerated) were compared in terms of extraction efficiency, precision, treatment time and partitioning patterns of metals. Extractable contents of Cu, Cr, Ni, Pb and Zn were measured by flame atomic absorption spectrometry, and the analytical results obtained by the two procedures were statistically compared (P = 0.95). No significant differences were found in the two first fractions (i.e. exchangeable and carbonate-bound), however, in the third and fourth extracts (i.e. Fe-Mn oxides-bound and organic matter-bound) the extraction capability of the two methods differed significantly. Received: 15 June 1998 / Revised: 10 November 1998 / Accepted: 11 November 1998  相似文献   

10.
A modified three-step sequential extraction procedure proposed by the Commission of European Communities Bureau of Reference (BCR) was applied to certified reference materials of three different soil groups (rendzina, luvisol, and cambisol) and sewage sludge of different compositions originating from a municipal water treatment plant in order to assess potential mobility and the distribution of molybdenum in the resulting fractions. In the soils examined, molybdenum was present almost entirely in the mineral lattice, the content of molybdenum in the fractions of the studied reference materials of sludges was predominant in the fraction, represents Mo bound to organic matter and sulphide.The internal check of accuracy was performed on the results of the sequential extraction by comparing of the extractable amounts of molybdenum in the sequential procedure with the results of the pseudototal digestion of original samples. The recovery ranged from 96 to 101% and the precision (RSD) in the extracts was below 10%.  相似文献   

11.
Influence of heavy metals was investigated by conducting various tests on the samples collected from aquaculture shrimp in Selangor, Malaysia. The concentration of heavy metals in the sludge and potential of mobility based on its association forms was studied. Two sequential extraction methods (five stages Tessier method and three steps BCR method) were used to determine the binding forms of the metals.From the analysis, Ca, Fe and Mn were found to be highest concentrated metals compared to Zn, Cu, Cr, Cd and Pb in aquaculture shrimp sludge. From the sequential extraction, Cd, Mn and Pb were mostly found in exchangeable/carbonate form, showed its susceptibility to be leached easily. Also Cu and Zn were extracted predominantly in oxidizable form. All metal concentrations (except Cd, Zn and Cu) were extracted to be higher in residual fraction in this method. The results of BCR method are totally similar to the five stages Tessier method. By comparing the percent of recovery, the BCR method was better than Tessier method. Nevertheless for both methods the percent of their recoveries were acceptable. For Pseudototal metal digestion, although the concentration of Cd is less than other heavy metals, it is very harmful as a fertilizer because Cd is one of the heavy metals that might be in the leaf or fruit of plants. Also for investigation of Ca in the sludge, this element was measured and high amounts of that show sludge is useful for growing of plant. The results of direct digestion of heavy metals show that with the control of Cd in this sludge we can use this sludge as fertilizer in soils for agriculture but it is better if it is used for fruitless plants.  相似文献   

12.
Results are shown obtained in the optimization of an automatic flow injection system that combines microwave digestion with atomic spectrometric detection (FAAS, ICP/AES) for the determination of heavy metals in sewage sludge. Digestion is performed by preparing a suspension of the sample in 1.5 mol/l HNO(3) and making it flow through a PTFE capillary tube placed inside a conventional microwave oven. The effects of the length and inner diameter of the capillary tube, as well as that of the pumping rate, have been studied in order to find the experimental conditions that allow a quantitative elemental recovery in the shortest period of time possible. The optimization study was carried out on a certified sample (BCR No. 146), and the elements determined were Zn, Cu, Pb, Cd, Ni and Cr. The experimental data (percent recovery vs. digestion time) have been fitted to a mathematical model in order to quantify the influence of each of the variables studied. The optimized procedure (MW-ICP/AES) has been applied to one ordinary and one certified sewage sludge sample. In comparison with the conventional methods of sewage sludge analysis, the one proposed is less time consuming, while being equally precise and accurate.  相似文献   

13.
In a research of chromium availability, the three-stage sequential extraction procedure, proposed by European Community Bureau of Reference (BCR), has been applied for the metal fractionation in marine sediment samples. The procedure has been modified, evaluating the effect of microwave energy to perform the sequential method. Results achieved a substantial reduction in time in comparison to the traditional shaking technique. The time of the first and the second extractions were reduced to 30 s in both steps using microwave heating and working at 66 W of power. To the third extraction, higher power was necessary so it was chosen to work at 198 W. In the last step investigated, time was reduced to 1 min, being a great improvement respect to the conventional BCR sequential extraction protocol.Chromium determinations in these extracts were carried out by Electrothermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (ETAAS). The developed method was applied for chromium determination in marine sediment samples from Ria de Arousa (Galicia, NW of Spain). The values obtained by our laboratory ranged from 0.10 to 1.02 μg g−1 for soluble and reducible fractions, and from 5.5 to 60.0 μg g−1 for the oxidisable fraction. The higher concentrations obtained were the chromium associated with the organic fraction of the marine sediments.  相似文献   

14.
In this work, a fast microwave assisted extraction procedure was developed and optimized for the heavy metals (Cu, Ni, Cr, Pb and Cd) partitioning in the three-stage sequential extraction procedure proposed by the European Standards, Measurements and Testing (SM&;T) Program, formerly the Community Bureau of Reference (BCR). The microwave oven procedure was optimized to obtain extraction efficiencies similar to the conventional BCR procedure, in less time, while using smaller volumes of reagents. In the optimization process, three variables (extraction time, ramping time and microwave power) were considered as factors and as a response the concentration of different metal ions in each individual BCR fraction. Interactions between analytical factors and their optimized levels were investigated using a central composite design. Extractable metals obtained by both comparable methodologies were measured by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. With the use of optimal microwave conditions, steps 1–3 of the sequential extraction (including the hydrogen peroxide digestion in step 3) could be completed between 21 and 22 min. Detection limits were between 1 and 18 ng l− 1. The accuracy of the proposed method was checked with a certified reference material (CRM) of Lake Sediment BCR 701. Values obtained were in accordance with those reported for the certified material with only a few exceptions. Different origin sediments (river and marine) were analyzed by both BCR and MW procedures, and the results obtained were comparable according to the t-paired-test for a 95% confidence level.  相似文献   

15.
An optimized BCR three-step sequential extraction procedure, several single extractions and the reactive aluminium determination after chelating ion-exchange on Iontosorb Salicyl were used for the fractionation of Al in soil samples from a mining area with sulphidic deposits. The aluminium amounts released by used extraction procedures were valuated and discussed. The new indicative values of fractional Al concentrations in five Chinese certified reference materials (GBW 07103, 07304, 07401, 07405, 07407) were determined after Al fractionation by optimized BCR three-step sequential extraction procedure. The aluminium toxicity indexes calculated for two different soil extracts and plant samples were used for assessment of Al toxicity to plants. It can be concluded that the most sensitive indicator of increasing aluminium toxicity to plants is determination of reactive Al species in soil solution by chelating ion-exchange solid phase extraction.The atomic absorption spectrometry with nitrous oxide-acetylene flame was used for determination of total Al amounts and the Al concentration in different extraction fractions as well.  相似文献   

16.
Sequential extraction procedures are widely used to characterize the fractionation of metal species in solid media. With the variety of different sequential procedures used in environmental and geochemical exploration studies, it is difficult to compare results between studies. Thus, harmonization and standardization are required to provide greater inter-study comparability for fraction-specific metals. In this study, the optimized BCR three-step sequential extraction procedure is applied to five certified reference materials (SRM 2710, SRM 2711, CRM 483, CRM 601 and CW 7). Four fractions are reported, acid extractable, reducible, oxidizable, and residual for Al, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn. The objectives of this study were to characterize experimental precision and/or accuracy and to establish baseline data of fraction-specific element concentrations for future studies applying the optimized BCR three-step extraction procedure. The optimized procedure was found to be precise (typically <5%) for all metals in all fractions. Accuracy was acceptable (typically ±15% relative to published indicative values for Cu, Pb and Zn for CRM 483 and CRM 601) for all individual fractions. Detailed fraction-specific concentration data are presented, based on five replicates, for the first time using the optimized procedure for Al, Fe and Mn in CRM 483 and CRM 601, and for Al, Cu, Fe, Mn, Pb and Zn in SRM 2710, SRM 2711 and CW 7.  相似文献   

17.
Results are shown obtained in the optimization of an automatic flow injection system that combines microwave digestion with atomic spectrometric detection (FAAS, ICP/AES) for the determination of heavy metals in sewage sludge. Digestion is performed by preparing a suspension of the sample in 1.5 mol/l HNO3 and making it flow through a PTFE capillary tube placed inside a conventional microwave oven. The effects of the length and inner diameter of the capillary tube, as well as that of the pumping rate, have been studied in order to find the experimental conditions that allow a quantitative elemental recovery in the shortest period of time possible. The optimization study was carried out on a certified sample (BCR No. 146), and the elements determined were Zn, Cu, Pb, Cd, Ni and Cr. The experimental data (percent recovery vs. digestion time) have been fitted to a mathematical model in order to quantify the influence of each of the variables studied. The optimized procedure (MW-ICP/AES) has been applied to one ordinary and one certified sewage sludge sample. In comparison with the conventional methods of sewage sludge analysis, the one proposed is less time consuming, while being equally precise and accurate.  相似文献   

18.
The 3 steps sequential extraction procedure proposed by the Standards Measurements and Testing program (SM&T--formerly BCR) of the European Union has been applied for the speciation of metals in sediments. Results obtained by the application of the BCR standardized procedure were compared to those of two four step sequential extraction procedures, which are different from the BCR procedure only for the introduction of an additional step with NaOCl, as 2nd and 3rd step respectively. Five different metals have been taken into consideration: Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn. The analytical performances of the laboratory have been evaluated using three certified reference materials: the BCR 601 lake sediment for the BCR sequential extraction procedure, PACS-1 and MESS-1 for total metal concentration. Results showed that the efficiency of NaOCl treatment is higher or at least equal to that of H2O2 treatment and that its selectivity is quite satisfying. Moreover the NaOCl treatment doesn't significantly influence the extraction of the easily reducible fraction.  相似文献   

19.
The sequential extraction test, known as a BCR procedure, was used to assess a leachability of heavy metals (Zn, Cd, Pb, Cu) from the metallo-organic sorbent—iron humate—loaded with these metals. The sequential test allowed to discriminate between various fractions of heavy metals, namely the acid-extractable fraction, the fraction bound to Fe oxides, and the fraction bound to organic matter. It was proven that the heavy metals are bound mainly to Fe oxides and organic matter, and thus they may be relatively hardly liberated into the environment. The BCR sequential extraction test exhibited a very good repeatability, when it was applied to the loaded sorbent—relative standard deviations were typically lower than 10%.  相似文献   

20.
The application of a recently proposed microanalytical flow-through system for on-line sequential extraction of heavy metals from solid samples of environmental interest is described. Using various extraction schemes (a nitric acid scheme, a two-stage extraction scheme using two reagents applied in the BCR procedure) and comparison with the common batch sequential BCR procedure, the suitability of the system for fast screening of solid environmental samples is demonstrated. By pumping leaching agents sequentially through the sample held in a micro cartridge, the different metal fractions present can be assessed in less than an hour. Method evaluation was performed using SRM 1648 urban particulate matter and BCR 701 lake sediment reference material certified for extractable metals. The need for and design of laboratory internal reference material suitable for simulating the natural (dynamic) processes of metal release into the environment is also discussed. For the first time correlation is sought between fractionation techniques and physiologically based methods for assessment of the bioaccessibility of metals in biomatrices.  相似文献   

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