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1.
Summary A method for the on-line prereduction of As(V) was developed in order to determine As(III) and As(V) with the same sensitivity by continuous flow hydride generation. In this procedure, the sample is continuously mixed with concentrated hydrochloric acid and a potassium iodideascorbic acid solution, flows through a heated PTFE-tube and is determined by hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry in a heated quartz cell. The selective analysis of As(III) is carried out by continuous mixing of the sample with acetic acid and hydride generation. The method allows the rapid determination of inorganic arsenic species at concentrations down to 1 g/l. A manual sample preparation is not required.  相似文献   

2.
M. Hashemi  P. Modasser 《Talanta》2007,73(1):166-171
A simple spectrophotometric method is presented for the sequential determination of inorganic arsenic (As) species in one sample. It is based on the sequential arsine generation from As(III) and As(V) using selective medium reactions, collection of the arsine generated in an absorbing solution containing permanganate and ethanol at 5 °C and subsequent reduction of permanganate by arsine. The decrease in permanganate absorbance at 524.2 nm is monitored for As determination. The acetic acid/sodium acetate and HCl mediums were used for selective arsine generation from As(III) and remaining As(V) in one solution, respectively. The effect of interferences and their possible mechanisms were discussed. Interferences from transition metal ions were removed by using a Chelex 100 resin. Under optimized conditions, the established method is applicable to the determination of 3-30 μg of each arsenic species. Good recoveries (96-102%) of spiked artificial sea water, tap water and standard mixtures of As(III) and As(V) were also found. The method is simple, accurate, precise and environmental friendly.  相似文献   

3.
Practical procedures are given for determination of arsenic(III) and (V) in hydrofluoric acid by means of hydride generation and atomic absorption spectrometry. Arsenic(III) can be determined by direct generation of arsine with sodium borohydride in hydrochloric/hydrofluoric acid medium, arsenic(V) being only slightly reduced under the conditions used. For its determination, arsenic(V) has to be prereduced with potassium iodide, and even then its reduction to arsenic(III) and then arsine is far from complete. It is possible to determine it in presence of arsenic(III) by a difference method, but this is recommended only if the As(V)/As(III) ratio is greater than 1. Total arsenic can be determined after oxidation of As(III) and evaporation of most of the hydrofluoric acid. The limit of determination is 5 g/l for arsenic(III) and 0.25 g/l for total arsenic; the relative standard deviation is about 10%.  相似文献   

4.
A flow-injection system with electrochemical hydride generation and atomic absorption detection for As(III)/As(V) determination is described. A simple electrolytic flow-through cell has been developed and optimized. Several cathode materials like Pt, Ag, Cu, C and Pb have been tested. The influence of the electrolysis current, concentration of sulfuric acid, carrier stream, flow rate, sample volume and interferences by other metals on the arsenichydride generation have been studied. For the determination of total inorganic arsenic, As(V) is reduced to As(III) on-line by postassium iodide or L-cysteine at 95 degrees C. The influence of the temperature and the reduction medium on this pre-reduction step has been tested. The calibration curve is linear in the range of 5 to 50 microg/L for As(III) and total inorganic arsenic and shows a higher sensitivity than in case of reduction with sodium tetrahydroborate. The detection limit is 0.4 microg/L for As(III) and 0.5 microg/L for total inorganic arsenic at a sample volume of 1 mL.  相似文献   

5.
The paper presents the principles and advantages of a technique combining high performance liquid chromatography and hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry (HPLC-HGAAS) applied to speciation analysis of inorganic species of arsenic As(III) and As(V) in ground water samples. With separation of the arsenic species on an ion-exchange column in the chromatographic system and their detection by the hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry, the separation of the analytical signals of the arsenic species was excellent at the limits of determination of 1.5 ng/ml As(III) and 2.2 ng/ml As(V) and RSD of 4.3% and 7.8% for the concentration of 25 ng/ml. The hyphenated technique has been applied for determination of arsenic in polluted ground water in the course of the study on migration of micropollutants. For total arsenic concentration two independent methods: HGICP-OES and HGAAS were used for comparison of results of real samples analysis.  相似文献   

6.
Nielsen S  Sloth JJ  Hansen EH 《Talanta》1996,43(6):867-880
A time-based flow-injection (FI) procedure for the determination of ultra-trace amounts of inorganic arsenic(III) is described, which combines hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry (HG-AAS) with on-line preconcentration of the analyte by inorganic coprecipitation-dissolution in a filterless knotted Microline reactor. The sample and coprecipitating agent are mixed on-line and merged with an ammonium buffer solution, which promotes a controllable and quantitative collection of the generated hydroxide on the inner walls of the knotted reactor incorporated into the FI-HG-AAS system. Subsequently the precipitate is eluted with 1 mol 1(-1) hydrochloric acid, allowing ensuing determination of the analyte via hydride generation. The preconcentration of As(III) was tested by coprecipitation with two different inorganic coprecipitating agents namely La(III) and Hf(IV). It was shown that As(III) is more effectively collected by lanthanum hydroxide than by hafnium hydroxide, the sensitivity achieved by the former being approximately 25% better. With optimal experimental conditions and with a sample consumption of 6.7 ml per assay, an enrichment factor of 32 was obtained at a sample frequency of 33 samples h(-1). The limit of detection (3sigma) was 0.003 microg 1(-1) and the precision (relative standard deviation) was 1.0% (n = 11) at the 0.1 microg 1(-1) level.  相似文献   

7.
Procedures are described for the determination of arsenicals in water and urine by flameless atomic absorption spectrometry ; these avoid the isolation and transfer of arsine(s) and permit some differentiation between the inorganic and organic (methyl) arsenic content of a sample. Samples of water or urine are heated with hydrochloric acid, and treated with iodide ion. Arsenic species, as the iodides, are extracted into chloroform and then either reextracted into deionized water for measurement of inorganic arsenic, or reextracted into dilute dichromate solution for total arsenic determination; the difference furnishes levels of organic arsenic. Aliquots of the final aqueous extracts are analyzed by graphite-furnace atomic absorption spectrometry, with an arsenic electrodeless discharge lamp. The lower detection limit for water and urine was 10 p.p.b. The recoveries (and Sg values) were: 87.0% (3.0) and 93.0 % (7.9), for inorganic arsenic in water and urine, respectively; 92.3 % (5.3) for mixtures of inorganic and methylated arsenic (total arsenic) in water and urine; and 98.7 % (3.9) and 88.4% (3.6) for dimethylarsenic in water and urine, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
李勋  汪正浩 《中国化学》2007,25(3):295-299
A new direct procedure for the determination of inorganic arsenic species was developed by electrochemical hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry (EcHG-AAS) with selective electrochemical reduction. The determination of inorganic arsenic species is based on the fact that As(Ⅲ) shows significantly higher absorbance at low electrolytic currents than As(Ⅴ) in 0.3 mol·L^-1 H2SO4. The electrolytic current used for the determination of As(Ⅲ) without considerable interferences of As(Ⅴ) was 0.4 A, whereas the current for the determination of As(Ⅲ) and As(Ⅴ) was 1.2 A. For equal concentrations of As(Ⅲ) and As(Ⅴ) in a sample, the interferences of As(Ⅴ) during the As(Ⅲ) determination were smaller than 5%. The absorbance for As(Ⅴ) could be calculated by subtracting that for As(Ⅲ) measured at 0.4 A from the total absorbance for As(Ⅲ) and As(Ⅴ) measured at 1.2 A, and then the concentration of As(Ⅴ) can be obtained by its calibration curve at 1.2 A. The methodology developed provided the detection limits of 0.3 and 0.6 ng·mL^-1 for As(Ⅲ) and As(Ⅴ), respectively. The relative standard deviations were of 3.5% for 20 ng·mL^-1 As(Ⅲ) and 3.2% for 20 ng·mL^-1 As(Ⅴ). The method was successfully applied to determination of soluble inorganic arsenic species in Chinese medicine.  相似文献   

9.
Water and ‘soft’ extractions (hydroxylammonium hydrochloride, ammonium oxalate and orthophosphoric acid) have been studied and applied to the determination of arsenic species (arsenite, arsenate, monomethylarsonic acid (MMA) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMA)) in three environmental solid reference materials (river sediment, agricultural soil, sewage sludge) certified for their total arsenic content. The analytical method used was ion exchange liquid chromatography coupled on‐line to atomic fluorescence spectroscopy through hydride generation. Very low detection limits for arsenic were obtained, ranging from 0.02 to 0.04 mg kg?1 for all species in all matrices studied. Orthophosphoric acid is the best extractant for sediment (mixed origin) and sludge samples (recent origin) but not for the old formation soil sample, from which arsenic is extracted well only by oxalate. Both inorganic forms (As(III) and As(V)) are significant in all samples, As(V) species being predominant. Moreover, organic forms are found in water extracts of all samples and are more important in the sludge sample. These organic forms are also present in the ‘soft’ extracts of sludge. Microwave‐assisted extraction appears to minimize the risk of a redox interconversion of inorganic arsenic forms. This study points out the necessity of combining direct and sequential extraction procedures to allow for initial arsenic speciation and to elucidate the different mineralogical phases–species associations. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

10.
A flow-injection system with electrochemical hydride generation and atomic absorption detection for As(III)/As(V) determination is described. A simple electrolytic flow-through cell has been developed and optimized. Several cathode materials like Pt, Ag, Cu, C and Pb have been tested. The influence of the electrolysis current, concentration of sulfuric acid, carrier stream, flow rate, sample volume and interferences by other metals on the arsenichydride generation have been studied. For the determination of total inorganic arsenic, As(V) is reduced to As(III) on-line by postassium iodide or L-cysteine at 95° C. The influence of the temperature and the reduction medium on this pre-reduction step has been tested. The calibration curve is linear in the range of 5 to 50 g/L for As(III) and total inorganic arsenic and shows a higher sensitivity than in case of reduction with sodium tetrahydroborate. The detection limit is 0.4 g/L for As(III) and 0.5 g/L for total inorganic arsenic at a sample volume of 1 mL.  相似文献   

11.
A simple procedure was developed for the speciation of inorganic arsenic by electrochemical hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry (EcHG–AAS), without pre-reduction of As(V). Glassy carbon was selected as cathode material in the flow cell. An optimum catholyte concentration for simultaneous generation of arsine from As(III) and As(V) was 0.06 mol l−1 H2SO4. Under the optimized conditions, adequate sensitivity and difference in ratio of slopes of the calibration curves for As(III) and As(V) can be achieved at the electrolytic currents of 0.6 and 1 A. The speciation of inorganic arsenic can be performed by controlling the electrolytic currents, and the concentration of As(III) and As(V) in the sample can be calculated according to the equations of absorbance additivity obtained at two selected electrolytic currents. The calibration curves were linear up to 50 ng ml−1 for both As(III) and As(V) at 0.6 and 1 A. The detection limits of the method were 0.2 and 0.5 ng ml−1 for As(III) and As(V) at 0.6 A, respectively. The relative standard deviations were of 2.1% for 20 ng ml−1 As(III) and 2.5% for 20 ng ml−1 As(V). The method was validated by the analysis of human hair certified reference material and successfully applied to speciation of soluble inorganic arsenic in Chinese medicine.  相似文献   

12.
A simple procedure was developed for the direct determination of As(III) and As(V) in water samples by flow injection hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometry (FI–HG–AAS), without pre-reduction of As(V). The flow injection system was operated in the merging zones configuration, where sample and NaBH4 are simultaneously injected into two carrier streams, HCl and H2O, respectively. Sample and reagent injected volumes were of 250 μl and flow rate of 3.6 ml min−1 for hydrochloric acid and de-ionised water. The NaBH4 concentration was maintained at 0.1% (w/v), it would be possible to perform arsine selective generation from As(III) and on-line arsine generation with 3.0% (w/v) NaBH4 to obtain total arsenic concentration. As(V) was calculated as the difference between total As and As(III). Both procedures were tolerant to potential interference. So, interference such as Fe(III), Cu(II), Ni(II), Sb(III), Sn(II) and Se(IV) could, at an As(III) level of 0.1 mg l−1, be tolerated at a weight excess of 5000, 5000, 500, 100, 10 and 5 times, respectively. With the proposed procedure, detection limits of 0.3 ng ml−1 for As(III) and 0.5 ng ml−1 for As(V) were achieved. The relative standard deviations were of 2.3% for 0.1 mg l−1 As(III) and 2.0% for 0.1 mg l−1 As(V). A sampling rate of about 120 determinations per hour was achieved, requiring 30 ml of NaBH4 and waste generation in order of 450 ml. The method was shown to be satisfactory for determination of traces arsenic in water samples. The assay of a certified drinking water sample was 81.7±1.7 μg l−1 (certified value 80.0±0.5 μg l−1).  相似文献   

13.
The interfering effects of various foreign ions on the determination of arsenic were studied by hydride generation inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (HG-ICP-AES). There were serious inhibiting interferences by Cu, Pb, Co, Au, Pd and Ni. However, by using cyanide as a complexing agent these interferences could be completely eliminated over a wide range of interferent concentration. The optimum chemical parameters for continuous arsine generation were studied. A major advantage of this technique is that it only needs low acid concentrations and produces less hazardous waste. Sensivity, selectivity and accuracy of the determination of arsenic by HG-ICP-AES were investigated. The detection limit (in 1 mol/l HCl medium) for arsenic(III) was 0.82 ng/ml. The relative standard deviation for ten determinations of a solution containing 50 ng/ml arsenic was 1.3%.  相似文献   

14.
Methods for the atomic fluorescence spectrometric (AFS) determination of total arsenic and arsenic species in wines based on continuous flow hydride generation (HG) with atomization in miniature diffusion flame (MDF) are described. For hydride-forming arsenic, l-cysteine is used as reagent for pre-reduction and complexation of arsenite, arsenate, monomethylarsonate and dimethylarsinate. Concentrations of hydrochloric acid and tetrahydroborate are optimized in order to minimize interference by ethanol. Procedure permits determination of the sum of these four species in 5–10-fold diluted samples with limit of detection (LOD) 0.3 and 0.6 μg l 1 As in white and red wines, respectively, with precision between 2% and 8% RSD at As levels within 0.5–10 μg l 1.Selective arsine generation from different reaction media is used for non-chromatographic determination of arsenic species in wines: citrate buffer at pH 5.1 for As(III); 0.2 mol l 1 acetic acid for arsenite + dimethylarsinate (DMA); 8 mol l 1 HCl for total inorganic arsenic [As(III) + As(V)]; and monomethylarsonate (MMA) calculated by difference. Calibration with aqueous and ethanol-matched standard solutions of As(III) is used for 10- and 5-fold diluted samples, respectively. The LODs are 0.4 μg l 1 for As(III) and 0.3 μg l 1 for the other three As species and precision is within 4–8% RSDs.Arsenic species in wine were also determined by coupling of ion chromatographic separation on an anion exchange column and HG-flame AFS detection. Methods were validated by means of recovery studies and comparative analyses by HG-AFS and electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry after microwave digestion. The LODs were 0.12, 0.27, 0.15 and 0.13 μg l 1 (as As) and RSDs were 2–6%, 5–9%, 3–7% and 2–5% for As(III), As(V), MMA and DMA arsenic species, respectively. Bottled red and white wines from Bulgaria, Republic of Macedonia and Italy were analyzed by non-chromatographic and chromatographic procedures and the As(III), arsenite, has been confirmed as major arsenic species.  相似文献   

15.
A rapid method based on gas chromatography-mass spectrometry was developed for analysis of four volatile arsenic species: arsine, monomethylarsine (MMA), dimethylarsine (DMA) and trimethylarsine (TMA). With the proposed method gaseous arsenic species could be determined in less than 2 min and no pre-treatment for gas phase samples was needed, which minimized the risks of species conversion before analysis. The detection limits for different species were 24–174 pg. The standards for arsine, MMA and DMA were prepared by reaction between arsenic acid, monomethylarsonic acid or dimethylarsinic acid with tetrahydroborate(III) and nitric acid. The effect of pH on recovery of different arsine species was examined and is discussed. The TMA was obtained commercially as liquid. Also stability of inorganic (arsine) and organic (TMA) gaseous arsenic species in air was studied as a function of time.  相似文献   

16.
Leal LO  Forteza R  Cerdà V 《Talanta》2006,69(2):500-508
In this study, a new technique by hydride generation-atomic fluorescence spectrometry (HG-AFS) for determination and speciation of inorganic arsenic using multisyringe flow injection analysis (MSFIA) is reported. The hydride (arsine) was generated by injecting precise known volumes of sample, a reducing sodium tetrahydroborate solution (0.2%), hydrochloric acid (6 M) and a pre-reducing solution (potassium iodide 10% and ascorbic acid 0.2%) to the system using a multisyringe burette coupled with one multi-port selection valve. This solution is used to pre-reduce As(V) to As(III), when the task is to speciate As(III) and As(V). As(V) is determined by the difference between total inorganic arsenic and As(III). The reagents are dispensed into a gas-liquid separation cell. An argon flow delivers the arsine into the flame of an atomic fluorescence spectrometer. A hydrogen flow has been used to support the flame. Nitrogen has been employed as a drier gas (Fig. 1).Several variables such as sample and reagents volumes, flow rates and reagent concentrations were investigated in detail. A linear calibration graph was obtained for arsenic determination between 0.1 and 3 μg l−1. The detection limit of the proposed technique (3σb/S) was 0.05 μg l−1. The relative standard deviation (R.S.D.) of As at 1 μg l−1 was 4.4 % (n = 15). A sample throughput of 10 samples per hour was achieved. This technique was validated by means of reference solid and water materials with good agreement with the certified values. Satisfactory results for speciation of As(III) and As(V) by means of the developed technique were obtained.  相似文献   

17.
An automated system for hydride generation - cryotrapping- gas chromatography - atomic absorption spectrometry with the multiatomizer is described. Arsines are preconcentrated and separated in a Chromosorb filled U-tube. An automated cryotrapping unit, employing nitrogen gas formed upon heating in the detection phase for the displacement of the cooling liquid nitrogen, has been developed. The conditions for separation of arsines in a Chromosorb filled U-tube have been optimized. A complete separation of signals from arsine, methylarsine, dimethylarsine, and trimethylarsine has been achieved within a 60 s reading window. The limits of detection for methylated arsenicals tested were 4 ng l(-1). Selective hydride generation is applied for the oxidation state specific speciation analysis of inorganic and methylated arsenicals. The arsines are generated either exclusively from trivalent or from both tri- and pentavalent inorganic and methylated arsenicals depending on the presence of L-cysteine as a prereductant and/or reaction modifier. A TRIS buffer reaction medium is proposed to overcome narrow optimum concentration range observed for the L-cysteine modified reaction in HCl medium. The system provides uniform peak area sensitivity for all As species. Consequently, the calibration with a single form of As is possible. This method permits a high-throughput speciation analysis of metabolites of inorganic arsenic in relatively complex biological matrices such as cell culture systems without sample pretreatment, thus preserving the distribution of tri- and pentavalent species.  相似文献   

18.
A method is described for the determination of traces of arsenic, based on sodium tetrahydroborate reduction of arsenic and introduction of the arsine formed to a relatively low-powered (1.6 kW) inductively-coupled plasma where the arsenic atomic emission is generated, Inter-element interference effects are described; many can be eliminated by addition of potassium iodide to the sample solutions, but the standard additions method is recommended for accurate arsenic determination. Potassium iodide is also used for prereducing arsenic(V) to arsenic(III). The method has a detection limit of 0.1 ng As ml-1 and the linear calibration range spans nearly four orders of magnitude. The proposed method is applied to the determination of ng ml-1 levels of arsenic in waste waters.  相似文献   

19.
A flow-injection system for the determination of inorganic arsenic [As(III)/As(V)] and selenium species [Se(IV)/ Se(VI)] by electrochemical hydride generation, cryogenic trapping and atomic absorption spectrometry is described. A simple and robust electrochemical flow-through cell with fibrous carbon as cathodic material has been developed for the speciation of arsenic. A cold-trap system makes possible to eliminate interferences from methylated arsenic species. Without pre-reduction the system is selective to As(III) and Se(IV). The selectivity obtained with fibrous carbon as cathode material is compared to the selectivity obtained with a second electrochemical flow-through cell using a lead foil as cathode.  相似文献   

20.
A new approach for developing a cloud point extraction-electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry has been described and used for determination of arsenic. The method is based on phase separation phenomenon of non-ionic surfactants in aqueous solutions. After reaction of As(V) with molybdate towards a yellow heteropoly acid complex in sulfuric acid medium and increasing the temperature to 55 °C, analytes are quantitatively extracted to the non-ionic surfactant-rich phase (Triton X-114) after centrifugation.To decrease the viscosity of the extract and to allow its pipetting by the autosampler, 100 μl methanol was added to the surfactant-rich phase. An amount of 20 μl of this solution plus 10 μl of 0.1% m/v Pd(NO3)2 were injected into the graphite tube and the analyte determined by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry.Total inorganic arsenic(III, V) was extracted similarly after oxidation of As(III) to As(V) with KMnO4. As(III) was calculated by difference. After optimization of the extraction condition and the instrumental parameters, a detection limit (3σB) of 0.01 μg l−1 with enrichment factor of 52.5 was achieved for only 10 ml of sample. The analytical curve was linear in the concentration range of 0.02-0.35 μg l−1. Relative standard deviations were lower than 5%. The method was successfully applied to the determination of As(III) and As(V) in tap water and total arsenic in biological samples (hair and nail).  相似文献   

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