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1.
The determination of extractable trace metal contents in soil using single extraction procedures is currently performed in many laboratories to assess the bioavailable metal fraction (and related phytotoxic effects) and the accessability to the environment (e.g. contamination of ground waters). Owing to the need for validation of the extraction schemes used and of the analytical techniques, the EC Measurements and Testing Programme (formerly BCR) has organized a project for improving the quality of determination of extractable trace metal contents in soil, the first step being an interlaboratory study to adopt common extraction procedures and the second being a certification campaign to certify two soils for their extractable trace element contents following these procedures. This paper gives a brief overview of the project organisation and describes the preparation, homogeneity and stability studies of two soil candidate reference materials (sewage sludge-amended and terra rossa soils).  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

The determination of extractable trace metal contents in soils and sediments is currently performed in many laboratories to assess the bioavailable metal fraction (and related potential phyto-toxic effects) and the importance and possibility of mobilization of trace metals from polluted soil, sludge and sediment upon landfill application. Single and sequential extraction schemes are used for the assessment of the different “forms” of trace metals (e.g. “mobile/bioavailable”, “carbonate-bound” etc.). The lack of uniformity in the different extraction procedures used throughout the world does not allow the results to be compared or the procedures to be validated which has led to many criticisms in the past few years. Moreover, the lack of suitable reference materials for this type of operationally defined determinations did not enable the quality of the measurements to be controlled. Owing to the need for establishing common schemes for single and sequential extractions as well as for the improvement of the quality of extractable trace metal determinations in soil and sediments, the Community Bureau of Reference (BCR) has organised a project which results along with the state of the art of extractable trace metal determinations, use and applicability of extraction schemes and analytical limitations were decided to be thoroughly discussed in a workshop. This paper presents its main conclusions.  相似文献   

3.
A fast sample preparation method for the trace determination of some exploxives, by-products and degradation compounds in water by capillary gas chromatography is described. It is based on multiple extractions of the water sample with sub-milliliter amounts of solvent and subsequent concentration of the unified extracts by reducing its volume to a few microliters according to Dünges. The most suitable solvent was methyl-tert.-butylether. With electron caption detection and an aqueous sample volume of 25 to 100 ml, the determination level is in the pg/ml range. Received: 3 May 1996 / Revised: 28 June 1996 / Accepted: 5 July 1996  相似文献   

4.
Single extraction tests are commonly used to study the eco-toxicity and mobility of metals in soils, e.g. to assess the bioavailable metal fraction (and thus to estimate the related phyto-toxic and nutritional deficiency effects) and the environmentally accessible trace metals upon disposal of e.g. sediment on to a soil (e.g. contamination of ground waters). However, the lack of uniformity in the different procedures does not allow the results to be compared worldwide nor the procedures to be validated. This paper describes the interlaboratory testing of EDTA- and DTPA-extraction procedures for soil analysis, followed by the preparation of a calcareous soil reference material (CRM 600), the homogeneity and stability studies and the analytical work performed for the certification of the EDTA- and DTPA- extractable contents of some trace metals (following the standardized extraction procedures). Received: 21 May 1997 / Revised: 4 July 1997 / Accepted: 9 July 1997  相似文献   

5.
Single extraction tests are commonly used to study the eco-toxicity and mobility of metals in soils, e.g. to assess the bioavailable metal fraction (and thus to estimate the related phyto-toxic and nutritional deficiency effects) and the environmentally accessible trace metals upon disposal of e.g. sediment on to a soil (e.g. contamination of ground waters). However, the lack of uniformity in the different procedures does not allow the results to be compared worldwide nor the procedures to be validated. This paper describes the interlaboratory testing of EDTA- and DTPA-extraction procedures for soil analysis, followed by the preparation of a calcareous soil reference material (CRM 600), the homogeneity and stability studies and the analytical work performed for the certification of the EDTA- and DTPA- extractable contents of some trace metals (following the standardized extraction procedures). Received: 21 May 1997 / Revised: 4 July 1997 / Accepted: 9 July 1997  相似文献   

6.
Cappuyns V  Swennen R 《Talanta》2008,75(5):1338-1347
Different frequently used methods to determine the influence of acid conditions on heavy metal release from soils, sediments and waste materials, namely pHstat leaching tests and acid extractions with acetic acid (HOAc) (0.11 M and 0.43 M) and sodium acetate (NaOAc) (1 M) were compared for 30 samples (soils, sediments and waste materials) with different physico-chemical properties and a different degree of contamination. However, no distinct relationship was found between physico-chemical sample characteristics, total element concentrations and acid-extractable metal concentrations in the presented dataset.

pH played an important role in explaining the release of metals from the contaminated soils, sediments and waste materials. The pH-shift after extraction with the different acetic acid solutions (0.11 M and 0.43 M) was both explained by the initial pH of the sample and its acid neutralizing capacity. The pH of the NaOAc extract was well buffered and the release of elements from solid matrices by NaOAc was both the result of the complexation with acetate and pH (pH 5). Generally, a linear correlation was found between the amount of Zn and Cd extracted by 0.11 M HOAc, 0.43 M HOAc and 1 M NaOAc. The amounts of Zn and Cd extracted with HOAc (0.11 M and 0.43 M) were comparable with amounts of respectively Zn and Cd released during pHstat leaching at pH 4. However, for Cu, Pb and As, it was often not possible to relate the results of a pHstat leaching test to the results of single extractions with acetic acid solutions.  相似文献   


7.
In order to control the quality of trace element determinations in polymer, the Standards, Measurements and Testing Programme (formerly BCR) of the European Commission has started a project of which the final aim is to certify polymer reference materials for their contents of a range of trace elements. The first part of this project consisted in an interlaboratory study which aimed at testing the feasibility of preparation of candidate polymer reference materials and to detect and remove most of the pitfalls observed in trace element determinations. This paper presents the results of this interlaboratory study carried out prior to the certification campaign. Received: 22 April 1999 / Revised: 21 June 1999 / Accepted: 21 June 1999  相似文献   

8.
In order to control the quality of trace element determinations in polymer, the Standards, Measurements and Testing Programme (formerly BCR) of the European Commission has started a project of which the final aim is to certify polymer reference materials for their contents of a range of trace elements. The first part of this project consisted in an interlaboratory study which aimed at testing the feasibility of preparation of candidate polymer reference materials and to detect and remove most of the pitfalls observed in trace element determinations. This paper presents the results of this interlaboratory study carried out prior to the certification campaign. Received: 22 April 1999 / Revised: 21 June 1999 / Accepted: 21 June 1999  相似文献   

9.
Matús P  Kubová J  Bujdos M  Medved' J 《Talanta》2006,70(5):996-1005
The single extractions with 15 extractants (agents) (H2O, KCl, NH4Cl, NH4F, CaCl2, BaCl2, CuCl2, LaCl3, Na2S2O4, (NH4)2C2O4, Na4P2O7, NTA, EDTA, DTPA, HCl), the optimised BCR (Community Bureau of Reference) three-step sequential extraction procedure (SEP) and the solid phase extraction (SPE) by the chelating ion-exchanger Iontosorb Salicyl (cellulose resin containing covalently bound salicylic acid functional groups) were used for the partitioning of Al in very acid soil samples taken from an area influenced by acid mine solutions. The precision, accuracy and repeatibility for all steps of the optimised BCR SEP were checked on the various reference materials (CRM 483 sewage sludge amended soil, CRM BCR 701 freshwater sediment, SRM 2710 and SRM 2711 Montana soils). Also the new indicative values of the optimised BCR SEP fractional Al concentrations were obtained for these reference materials. The aluminium amounts obtained by the used extraction procedures were valuated and discussed from the aspect of the Al concentration in the plants (grass) growing on the same studied soils. The aluminium toxicity indexes (ATI) calculated for the studied soils, the BaCl2 and acetic acid soil extracts and the grass stems and roots were used for the assessment of the Al toxicity to the plants. The ATI value was defined as the ratio of the nutrient cations (Ca, Mg, K, Na) concentration sum to the Al concentration. The flame atomic absorption spectrometry (LOQ = 0.2 mg l−1) and the inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (LOQ = 0.03 mg l−1) were used for the aluminium quantification.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

An account is presented of a series of investigations and collaborative studies, initiated by BCR, on current methods of metal speciation by extraction of soils and sediments with chemical reagents. It was established by extensive consultation with European experts that the diverse procedures used could be harmonized into agreed methods. These methods, including both single extractant and sequential extraction procedures were subjected to collaborative, interlaboratory trials and the results, presented briefly here, showed that it was both possible and desirable that reference soils and sediments, characterised by certified values for extractable contents, be prepared. As a consequence of these studies two soils have been prepared and will shortly be the subject of interlaboratory analysis with a view to certification of their EDTA and acetic acid extractable contents of some heavy metals. Following this workshop a feasibility study of the agreed sequential extraction procedure will, it is believed, shortly lead to certification of sediments for contents extractable by a defined sequential extraction procedure.  相似文献   

11.
Single or sequential extraction procedures are often used for soil and sediment studies to determine forms or phases of elements (e.g. `bioavailable' forms of elements). The significance of the analytical results is highly dependent on the extraction procedures used, owing to the `operationally defined' character of these schemes which requires the adoption of standardized protocols. The first part of the present review discusses the aspects of standardization of leaching and extraction schemes as applied to environmental analysis. This second part focuses on the validation aspects of such procedures and describes the preparation and certification of soil and sediment reference materials certified for their extractable trace element contents, following standardized single and sequential extraction procedures.  相似文献   

12.
Single or sequential extraction procedures are often used for soil and sediment studies to determine forms or phases of elements (e.g. ‘bioavailable' forms of elements). The significance of the analytical results is highly dependent on the extraction procedures used, owing to the ‘operationally defined' character of these schemes which requires the adoption of standardized protocols. The first part of the present review discusses the aspects of standardization of leaching and extraction schemes as applied to environmental analysis. This second part focuses on the validation aspects of such procedures and describes the preparation and certification of soil and sediment reference materials certified for their extractable trace element contents, following standardized single and sequential extraction procedures.  相似文献   

13.
Thirty soils collected from different regions of China were used to investigate the nature of HCl-soluble sulfate (HCl-S) and to evaluate the importance of HCl-S for sulfur speciation in soils. The soils were first extracted with NaH2PO4 solution to remove water-soluble and adsorbed sulfate, followed by extraction in 1 mol/l HCl at room temperature, minimizing the hydrolysis of organic sulfur into sulfate. Excellent linear correlations (r = 0.986) were found between the HCl-S and the carbonate contents in these soils, indicating HCl-S was mainly the carbonate-occluded inorganic sulfate in calcareous soils, averaging for 39% of total sulfur. However, the traditionally recognized major form of soil sulfate (water-soluble and adsorbed sulfate) only account for 7.5% of total sulfur. The non-calcareous soils were also found to contain some of HCl-S (6.9% of total sulfur). Large errors will occur in the determination of ester sulfur if HCl-S is not subtracted from the HI-reducible sulfur, especially in calcareous soils and soils containing little organic matter, which was the common practice in sulfur speciation studies. The reasonableness of including HCl-S in the subtraction method to determine ester sulfur was further verified by the good correlations between ester sulfur and organic carbon content in the soils Received: 21 February 1996 / Revised: 10 June 1996 / Accepted: 14 June 1996  相似文献   

14.
Six interlaboratory studies were organised by the Standard, Measurement and Testing Programme of the European Commission on the determination of arsenic species (arsenobetaine, arsenocholine, monomethylarsonic acid, dimethylarsinic acid, As(III) and As(V)) in marine matrices and soil. A step-by-step approach was used and a meeting was held at the end of each study to help the participants to discover errors and to improve their analytical methods. The successive steps investigated the calibration procedures on various solutions, the separation and derivatisation techniques on solutions and extracts and the extraction on mussel and fish tissues. All materials used for the study were monitored for their stability. Verified calibration solutions and compounds were distributed to the participants in each exercise in order to trace calibration problems. The agreement between the results improved regularly and at the end of the six campaigns allowed the certification of a reference material of tuna-fish tissue (BCR-CRM 627) for its total arsenic, arsenobetaine and dimethylarsinic acid contents. Received: 31 March 1998 / Revised: 20 July 1998 / Accepted: 25 July 1998  相似文献   

15.
Six interlaboratory studies were organised by the Standard, Measurement and Testing Programme of the European Commission on the determination of arsenic species (arsenobetaine, arsenocholine, monomethylarsonic acid, dimethylarsinic acid, As(III) and As(V)) in marine matrices and soil. A step-by-step approach was used and a meeting was held at the end of each study to help the participants to discover errors and to improve their analytical methods. The successive steps investigated the calibration procedures on various solutions, the separation and derivatisation techniques on solutions and extracts and the extraction on mussel and fish tissues. All materials used for the study were monitored for their stability. Verified calibration solutions and compounds were distributed to the participants in each exercise in order to trace calibration problems. The agreement between the results improved regularly and at the end of the six campaigns allowed the certification of a reference material of tuna-fish tissue (BCR-CRM 627) for its total arsenic, arsenobetaine and dimethylarsinic acid contents. Received: 31 March 1998 / Revised: 20 July 1998 / Accepted: 25 July 1998  相似文献   

16.
Three very accurate (definitive) methods by RNAA for the determination of Se, As and Fe respectively, which were recently elaborated in our laboratory, are reviewed and their use in certification of reference materials and in checking the assigned values in proficiency tests is demonstrated on several examples. According to VIM 3 nomenclature these methods may be called: ratio primary reference measurement procedures (RPRMPs). RPRMPs with their expanded uncertainties of 2.7–3.6 % are comparable to ID-MS methods and are the only methods of such high metrological quality which can be used for the determination of trace amounts of monoisotopic elements.  相似文献   

17.
 Samples of bovine muscle, liver and urine, zeranol-free (RM 508, RM 509 and RM 510, respectively) and zeranol-containing (RM 511, RM 512 and RM 513, respectively) were prepared and tested as candidate reference materials. Preliminary studies on achievement of target zeranol content, intercomparison of analytical methods (HPLC-RIA and GC-MS) and effects of lyophilisation and irradiation on zeranol content are described. The preparation of the materials and testing for homogeneity and stability of zeranol in the materials are discussed. The coefficients of variation for zeranol determinations for between-vial homogeneity (4.0%, 4.4% and 4.6% for muscle, liver and urine, respectively) are similar to those for the analytical method (4.0%, 7.3% and 6.8% for muscle, liver and urine, respectively) indicating that the materials are homogeneous. Stability data over a 12-month storage period at temperatures ranging from −18 °C to +37 °C indicate that the materials are sufficiently stable for use as reference materials. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Dr Hilary Stevenson (The Queen’s University of Belfast/DANI) who, together with Mr. W. Graham, facilitated the irradiation of the lyophilised materials.--> Received: 18 June 1996/Revised: 19 August 1996/Accepted: 23 August 1996  相似文献   

18.
 Samples of bovine muscle, liver and urine, zeranol-free (RM 508, RM 509 and RM 510, respectively) and zeranol-containing (RM 511, RM 512 and RM 513, respectively) were prepared and tested as candidate reference materials. Preliminary studies on achievement of target zeranol content, intercomparison of analytical methods (HPLC-RIA and GC-MS) and effects of lyophilisation and irradiation on zeranol content are described. The preparation of the materials and testing for homogeneity and stability of zeranol in the materials are discussed. The coefficients of variation for zeranol determinations for between-vial homogeneity (4.0%, 4.4% and 4.6% for muscle, liver and urine, respectively) are similar to those for the analytical method (4.0%, 7.3% and 6.8% for muscle, liver and urine, respectively) indicating that the materials are homogeneous. Stability data over a 12-month storage period at temperatures ranging from −18 °C to +37 °C indicate that the materials are sufficiently stable for use as reference materials. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Dr Hilary Stevenson (The Queen’s University of Belfast/DANI) who, together with Mr. W. Graham, facilitated the irradiation of the lyophilised materials.--> Received: 18 June 1996/Revised: 19 August 1996/Accepted: 23 August 1996  相似文献   

19.
 Analyses of groundwater are routinely performed by control laboratories within the European Union to monitor the levels of major elements. The quality control of such determinations requires the use of certified reference materials which are representative of natural samples. However, the preparation and stabilisation of natural groundwater for their major element composition is difficult to achieve and materials simulating the mean composition of real samples often represent the best alternative. In order to investigate the feasibility of preparation and stabilisation of simulated groundwater samples, various tests were necessary prior to the production of a large batch of candidate reference materials. This paper presents the preparation of simulated groundwater reference materials and the different stabilisation procedures tested. Received: 9 September 1996/Revised: 4 December 1996/Accepted: 14 December 1996  相似文献   

20.
The single extraction procedures validated by the standards, measurement and testing programme (formerly BCR), extraction with 0.05 mol l−1 EDTA and 0.43 mol l−1 acetic acid, have been applied to reference materials of soils and sludges with certified total values of elements, in order to determine bioavailable contents of Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn. These soils, which represent uncontaminated pedologically different types of soils from Slovakia and sludges from city water treatment are characterized for the bioavailable fraction of the metals using the procedures followed by SM&T Programme. Concentrations of the elements under the study in the extracts were determined by flame (FAAS) using calibration curves in appropriate extractants and by electrothermal (ETAAS) atomic absorption spectrometry, using technique of standard additions for the evaluation of the results. The accuracy of the extraction procedures and determinations of the elements in the extracts was controlled using CRM 483 certified for EDTA- and acetic acid-extractable contents of Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn in sewage sludge amended soil.  相似文献   

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