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1.
Doğutan M  Filik H  Tor I 《Talanta》2003,59(5):1053-1060
A new melamine based polymeric sequestering resin was prepared for preconcentration and separation of hexavalent chromium from water, and its sequestering action was investigated. The water-insoluble, cross-linked sequestering resin was formed by reaction with bromosuccinic acid and cross-linking of melamine. The active sequestering group on the resin is NH-(Succinic acid) or salt thereof. The resulting chelating resin was characterized by infrared spectra. The newly prepared resin quantitatively retained Cr(VI) at pH 2.0-4.0 when the flow rate was maintained between 1 and 5 ml min−1. The retained Cr(VI) was instantaneously eluted with 25 ml of 0.1 M NaOH. The chromium species were determined by a flame atomic absorption spectrometer. The limits of detection for Cr(VI) and Cr(III) were found to be 5.3 and 4.2 μg l−1, respectively. The precision and accuracy of the proposed procedure was checked by the use synthetic and reference steel samples. The established preconcentration method was successfully applied to the determination and selective separation of Cr(VI) in electroplating industry wastewater. Total concentrations determined by the spectrophotometric method (110.3±0.6 g l−1 Cr(VI) and 1.2±0.3 g l−1 Cr(III)) are compared with those found by FAAS and the obtained results (110.4±1.8 g l−1 Cr(VI) and 1.4±0.5 g l−1 Cr(III)) show good agreement.  相似文献   

2.
A voltammetric procedure in the flow system for determination of traces of Cr(VI) in the presence of Cr(III) and humic acid is presented. The calibration graph is linear from 5×10−10 to 1×10−7 mol l−1 for an accumulation time of 120 s. The R.S.D. for 1×10−8 mol l−1 Cr(VI) is 5.3% (n=5). The detection limit estimated from 3σ for a low concentration of Cr(VI) and accumulation time of 120 s is 2×10−10 mol l−1. The method can be used for Cr(VI) determination in the presence of up to 50 mg l−1 of humic acid. The validation of the method was carried out by studying the recovery of Cr(VI) from spiked river water and by the comparison of the results of determination of Cr(VI) in a soil sample. The method cannot be used for analysis of samples containing high concentrations of chloride ions such as seawater and estuarine water.  相似文献   

3.
Themelis DG  Kika FS  Economou A 《Talanta》2006,69(3):615-620
A new rapid and sensitive FI assay is reported for the simultaneous direct spectrophotometric determination of trace Cr(VI) and Cr(III) in real samples. The method is based upon the reaction of Cr(VI) with chromotropic acid (CA) in highly acidic medium to form a water-soluble complex (λmax = 370 nm). Cr(III) reacts with CA only after its on-line oxidation to Cr(VI) by alkaline KIO4. The determination of each chromium species in the sample was achieved by absorbance differences. The calibration curves were linear over the range 3-4000 μg l−1 and 30-1200 μg l−1 for Cr(VI) and Cr(III), respectively, while the precision close to the quantitation limit was satisfactory in both cases (sr = 3.0% for Cr(VI) and 4.0% for Cr(III) (n = 10) at 10 and 50 μg l−1 level, respectively). The method developed proved to be adequately selective and sensitive (cL = 1 and 10 μg l−1 for Cr(VI) and Cr(III), respectively). The application of the method to the analysis of water samples (tap and mineral water) gave accurate results based on recovery studies (93-106%). Analytical results of real sample analysis were in good agreement with certified values.  相似文献   

4.
A simple and sensitive multicommutated flow procedure, implemented by employing a homemade light emitting diode (LED) based photometer, has been developed for the determination of chromium (VI) and total chromium in water. The flow system comprised a set of four solenoid micro-pumps, which were assembled to work as fluid propelling and as commutating devices. The core of the detection unit comprised a green LED source, a photodiode and a homemade flow cell of 100 mm length and 2 mm inner diameter. The photometric procedure for the speciation of chromium in natural waters was based on the reaction of Cr (VI) with 1,5-diphenylcarbazide. Cr (III) was previously oxidized to Cr (VI) and determined as the difference between total Cr and Cr (VI). After carrying out the assays to select the best operational conditions the features of the method included: a linear response ranging from 10 to 200 μg l−1 Cr (III) and Cr (VI) (r = 0.999, n = 7); limits of detection of 2.05 and 1.0 μg l−1 for Cr (III) and Cr (VI), respectively; a relative standard deviation lower than 2.0% (n = 20) for a typical solution containing 50 μg l−1 Cr; a sampling throughput of 67 and 105 determinations per hour for total Cr and Cr (VI), respectively, and recovery values within the range of 93-108% for spiked concentrations of the order of 50 μg l−1.  相似文献   

5.
The concentrations of chromium (III) and (VI) in fly ash from nine Australian coal fired power stations were determined. Cr(VI) was completely leached by extraction with 0.01 M NaOH solution and the concentration was determined by inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). This was confirmed by determining Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in the extracts of fly ash that had been spiked with chromium salts. These analytical measurements were done using a combination of ion-exchange chromatography and ICP-AES. The elutant was 0.05 M HNO3 containing 0.5%-CH3OH. When the column was operated at a flow rate of 1.2 ml min−1 and samples were injected by use of a sample loop with a volume of 100 μl, Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in sample solution was exclusively separated within approximately 10 min. The detection limits (3σ) were 5 ng for Cr(III) (0.050 mg l−1) and 9 ng for Cr(VI) (0.090 mg l−1), respectively. A relative standard deviation of 1.9% (n = 6) was obtained for the determination by IC-ICP-AES of 0.25 mg l−1 Cr(III) and Cr(VI).  相似文献   

6.
A highly sensitive, selective and simple kinetic method was developed for the determination of dissolved chromium species based on the catalytic effect of Cr(III) and/or Cr(VI) on the oxidation of 2-amino-5-methylphenol (AMP) with H2O2. The fixed time and initial rate variants were used for kinetic spectrophotometric measurements by tracing the oxidized product at 400 nm for 10 min after starting the reaction. Boric acid and Tween-40 exerted pronounced activating and micellar sensitizing effects on the studied redox reaction, respectively. The optimum reaction conditions were: 3.0 mmol l−1 AMP, 0.45 mol l−1 H2O2, 0.50 mol l−1 boric acid, 4 v/v% Tween-40, 10 mmol l−1 phosphate buffer and pH 6.45 ± 0.02 at 35 °C. Both Cr(III) and Cr(VI) ions exerted the same catalytic effect on the studied reaction. Linear calibration graphs were obtained for the determination of up to 6.0 ng ml−1 Cr with detection limits of 0.054 and 0.10 ng ml−1 Cr; following the fixed time and initial rate methods, respectively. The proposed method was successfully applied to the speciation and determination of trace levels of dissolved Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in natural and effluents of industrial waste water. The total dissolved Cr(III) and Cr(VI) species was determined first. In a second run, Cr(VI) was determined alone after precipitation of Cr(III) ions in presence of Al(OH)3 collector, where Cr(III) is then determined by difference. Moreover, published catalytic-spectrophotometric methods for chromium determination were reviewed.  相似文献   

7.
Ma HL  Tanner PA 《Talanta》2008,77(1):189-194
An isotope dilution method has been developed for the speciation analysis of chromium in natural waters which accounts for species interconversions without the requirement of a separation instrument connected to the mass spectrometer. The method involves (i) in-situ spiking of the sample with isotopically enriched chromium species; (ii) separation of chromium species by precipitation with iron hydroxide; (iii) careful measurement of isotope ratios using an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (ICP-MS) with a dynamic reaction cell (DRC) to remove isobaric polyatomic interferences. The method detection limits are 0.4 μg L−1 for Cr(III) and 0.04 μg L−1 for Cr(VI). The method is demonstrated for the speciation of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in local nullah and synthetically spiked water samples. The percentage of conversion from Cr(III) to Cr(VI) increased from 5.9% to 9.3% with increase of the concentration of Cr(VI) and Cr(III) from 1 to 100 μg L−1, while the reverse conversion from Cr(VI) to Cr(III) was observed within a range between 0.9% and 1.9%. The equilibrium constant for the conversion was found to be independent of the initial concentrations of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) and in the range of 1.0 (at pH 3) to 1.8 (at pH 10). The precision of the method is better than that of the DPC method for Cr(VI) analysis, with the added bonuses of freedom from interferences and simultaneous Cr(III) determination.  相似文献   

8.
Maltez HF  Carasek E 《Talanta》2005,65(2):537-542
A procedure for chromium speciation by F AAS using a flow system has been proposed. In this system, Cr(III) and Cr(VI) ions were adsorbed sequentially onto a mini-column packed with silica gel modified with zirconium phosphate and a mini-column packed with silica gel modified with zirconium oxide, respectively. The elution of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) was made with, respectively, nitric acid solution and tris(hydroxymethyl)methylamine (THAM) solution in reverse mode and determination by flame atomic absorption spectrometry without interference of the matrix. Chemical and flow variables as well as concomitant ions were studied in the developed procedure. The enrichment factor for Cr(III) and Cr(VI) was 20.8 and 24.9, respectively, using a preconcentration time of 3.75 min. The limit of detection for Cr(III) and Cr(VI) was 1.9, and 2.3 μg l−1, respectively. The precision of the method, evaluated as the relative standard deviation in solutions containing 100 μg l−1 of chromium species, by analyzing a series of seven replicates, was lower than 3.0%. The accuracy was assessed through recovery experiments of water samples and using another methodology.  相似文献   

9.
Hashemi P  Boroumand J  Fat'hi MR 《Talanta》2004,64(3):578-583
Three different agarose-based chelating adsorbents with, respectively, iminodiacetic acid (IDA), tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (TREN) and dipicolylamine (DPA) functional groups and an agarose-based anion exchanger (Q-Sepharose), were studied for the separation and preconcentration of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) species in water. Column recoveries of all the adsorbents were plotted against pH, and it was found that at pH 3.0 the IDA adsorbent selectively adsorbs Cr(III), with a 100 ± 1.0% recovery. The Q-Sepharose, on the other hand, accumulated only Cr(VI) at this pH, again with a recovery of 100 ± 1.0%. A dual column system was accordingly designed, using the two adsorbents in tandem, for the separation and preconcentration of the chromium species.The effects of pH, sample flow rate, column length, eluent type, eluent volume, acid concentration and interfering ions on the recoveries of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) were carefully studied. It was shown that by passing test solutions, at pH 3.0; through the dual column system, the two chromium species could be individually collected on the columns, respectively, and eluted, one after the other. A portion of 2 mol l−1 hydrochloric acid was used for elution of each column before final measurement by flame AAS method. A preconcentration factor of 12, a detection limit of 7.7 ± 0.1 μg l−1 and a precision expressed as relative standard deviation of 0.4% (at 0.3 mg l−1) were achieved for six replicates.Application of the developed method to the determination of chromium species in spiked river and tap water and wastewater samples, from a dye production plant, resulted in excellent agreements with accepted concentrations.  相似文献   

10.
A novel in-capillary reduction and capillary electrophoretic (CE)-chemiluminescence (CL) method was developed for the sensitive and selective determination of chromium(III) and chromium(VI). The proposed method was based on the in-capillary reduction of Cr(VI) with acidic H2O2 to form Cr(III) using the zone-passing technique and chemiluminescence detection of Cr(III). The sample [Cr3+ and CrO42−], hydrochloric acid, and H2O2 (reductant) solution segments were injected for specified periods of time in this order from the anodic end of a capillary, followed by application of an appropriate running voltage between both ends. As both chromium species have opposite charges, Cr3+ migrates to the cathode while CrO42− ion, moving oppositely to the anode, reacts with acidic H2O2, resulted in formation of Cr3+. Based on the migration time difference of both Cr3+ ions, they were separated by zone electrophoresis. Running buffer was composed of 0.02 mol l−1 HAc-NaAc (pH 4.7) with 1×10−3 mol l−1 EDTA. Parameters affecting CE-CL separation and detection, such as reductant concentration, mixing mode of the analytes with CL reagent, CL reaction reagent pH and concentration, stability of luminol-hydrogen peroxide mixed solution were optimized. The limits of detection for chromium(III) and chromium(VI) (3σ) were 6×10−13 mol l−1 (mass concentration 12 zmol) and 8×10−12 mol l−1 (160 zmol), respectively. This method offered potential advantages of simplicity, sensitivity, selectivity and applicability to the determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in environmental water.  相似文献   

11.
An organic-assisted alkaline extraction method was developed for the determination of hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) in plastics. The solubilization of polymer as a pre-step of the alkaline extraction provided good extraction efficiency of Cr(VI) from the sample. The optimization of the experimental conditions affecting the extraction and UV–vis spectrophotometric analysis was accomplished by evaluating the recovery rate of Cr(VI) through the analysis of Cr(VI) in in-house polymer reference materials (RMs). With the proposed method, most of the Cr(VI) in polymers was released within a short extraction time of 30 min and the Cr(III)-DPCO complex can be kept stable for 24 h. The heating for the extraction of the Cr(VI) was not necessary. The optimal pH of the final solution was fixed at 2.0. The proposed extraction method was applied successfully for the determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in spiked samples. The practical applicability of this new method was evaluated through the analysis of Cr(VI) in in-house polymer RMs. The good linearity was demonstrated at desired concentrations of the range 0–3.3 mg L−1. The detection limits were quite low, varying from 0.0061 to 0.0285 mg L−1. The recovery of Cr(VI) was between 97 and 106%, and the relative standard deviation (R.S.D.) was below 6%.  相似文献   

12.
The possibility of using moss (Funaria hygrometrica), immobilized in a polysilicate matrix as substrate for speciation of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in various water samples has been investigated. Experiments were performed to optimize conditions such as pH, amount of sorbent and flow rate, to achieve the quantitative separation of Cr(III) and Cr(VI). During all the steps of the separation process, Cr(III) was selectively sorbed on the column of immobilized moss in the pH range of 4-8 while, Cr(VI) was found to remain in solution. The retained Cr(III) was subsequently eluted with 10 ml of 2 mol l−1 HNO3. A pre-concentration factor of about 20 was achieved for Cr(III) when, 200 ml of water was passed. The immobilized moss was packed in a home made mini-column and incorporated in flow injection system for obtaining calibration plots for both Cr(III) and Cr(VI) at low ppb levels that were compared with the plots obtained without column. After separation, the chromium (Cr) species were determined by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) and flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS). The sorption capacity of the immobilized moss was found to be ∼11.5 mg g−1 for Cr(III). The effect of various interfering ions has also been studied. The proposed method was applied successfully for the determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in spiked and real wastewater samples and recoveries were found to be >95%.  相似文献   

13.
A procedure for determining the concentrations of dissolved chromium species in natural waters is described. Chromium(III) and chromium(VI), separated by co-precipitation with hydrated iron(III) oxide, and total dissolved chromium are determined separately by conversion to chromium(VI), extraction with APDC into MIBK and determination by a.a.s. The detection limit is 40 ng l?1 Cr. The dissolved chromium not amenable to separation and direct extraction is calculated by difference. In the waters investigated, total concentrations were relatively high (1–5 μg l?1) with Cr(VI) the predominant species in all areas sampled with one exception, where organically bound chromium was the major species.  相似文献   

14.
Dissolved chromium(III) and (VI) are coprecipitated separately from sea water, and chromium in the precipitates and particulate matter is determined by thin-film x-ray fluorescence spectrometry. In combination with an ultraviolet irradiation procedure whch releases bound metals, the method provides information about the speciation of chromium in near-shore surface sea water. The ratios of labile Cr(III)/(IIO+VI) generally lie in a narrow range (0.4–0.5) as do the sums of labile Cr(III) and (VI) concentrations (0.3–0.6 μg l?1). Bound chromium is variable (0–3 μg l?1) and constitutes from 0 to 90% of total dissolved chromium. Acidification of the samples in the traditional manner for trace metal determination is shown to alter the proportion of Cr(III) to Cr(VI).  相似文献   

15.
A novel method for selective determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in environmental water samples was developed based on target-induced fluorescence quenching of glutathione-stabilized gold nanoclusters (GSH-Au NCs). Fluorescent GSH-Au NCs were synthesized by a one-step approach employing GSH as reducing/protecting reagent. It was found that Cr(III) and Cr(VI) showed pH-dependent fluorescence quenching capabilities for GSH-Au NCs, and thus selective determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) could be achieved at different pHs. Addition of EDTA was able to effectively eliminate the interferences from other metal ions, leading to a good selectivity for this method. Under optimized conditions, Cr(III) showed a linear range of 25–3800 μg L−1 and a limit of detection (LOD) of 2.5 μg L−1. The Cr(VI) ion demonstrated a linear range of 5–500 μg L−1 and LOD of 0.5 μg L−1. The run-to-run relative standard deviations (n = 5) for Cr(III) and Cr(VI) were 3.9% and 2.8%, respectively. The recoveries of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in environmental water samples were also satisfactory (76.3–116%). This method, with its simplicity, low cost, high selectivity and sensitivity, could be used as a promising tool for chromium analysis in environmental water samples.  相似文献   

16.
Due to the potentially adverse effects of the chromium (VI) on the human health and also on the environment, the quantitative determination of Cr(VI) is of particular interest. This work herein reports a facile, selective and rapid colorimetric determination of Cr(VI) based on the peroxidase substrate-2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzo-thiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) diammonium salt (ABTS) as the color developing agent. ABTS, which was usually acted as peroxidase substrate for the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, is used here for the first time to fabricate the “signal-on” colorimetric Assay for Cr(VI). The ABTS was chosen instead of the commonly used 1,5-diphenylcarbazide (DPC) due to its good solubility, stability, sensitivity and low background. This method provided a convenient colorimetric detection of Cr(VI) with a wider linear range from 8.33 μg L−1 to 1.25 mg L−1 by recording the absorption spectra at the wavelength of 419 nm and a low detection limit of 7.87 μg L−1. In addition, the entire detection takes less than 10 min.  相似文献   

17.
On-line preconcentration system for the selective, sensitive and simultaneous determination of chromium species was investigated. Dual mini-columns containing chelating resin were utilized for the speciation and preconcentration of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in water samples. In this system, Cr(III) was collected on first column packed with iminodiacetate resin. Cr(VI) in the effluent from the first column was reduced to Cr(III), which was collected on the second column packed with iminodiacetate resin. Hydroxyammonium chloride was examined as a potential reducing agent for Cr(VI) to Cr(III).The effects of pH, sample flow rate, column length, and interfering ions on the recoveries of Cr(III) were carefully studied. Five millilitres of a sample solution was introduced into the system. The collected species were then sequentially washed by 1 M ammonium acetate, eluted by 2 M nitric acid and measured by ICP-AES. The detection limit for Cr(III) and Cr(VI) was 0.08 and 0.15 μg l−1, respectively. The total analysis time was about 9.4 min.The developed method was successfully applied to the speciation of chromium in river, tap water and wastewater samples with satisfied results.  相似文献   

18.
A separation method utilizing a synthetic zeolite (mordenite) was developed in order to eliminate the gas phase interference of Sb(III) on As(III) during quartz furnace hydride generation atomic absorption spectrometric (HGAAS) determination. The efficiency of the proposed separation method in the reduction of suppression effects of transition metal ions on As(III) signal was also investigated. Among the volatile hydride-forming elements and their different oxidation states tested (Sb(III), Sb(V), Se(IV), Se(VI), Te(IV), and Te(VI)), only Sb(III) was found to have a signal depression effect even at low (μg l−1) concentrations under the experimental conditions employed. It has been shown that mordenite adsorbs Sb(III) quantitatively, even at a concentration of 1000 μg l−1, at pHs greater than two, and also, it reduces the initial concentrations of the transition metal ions to lower levels which can be tolerated in many studies. The adsorption of Sb(III) on mordenite follows the Freundlich isotherm and is endothermic in nature.  相似文献   

19.
An on-line flow injection (FI) preconcentration-electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry (ETAAS) method is developed for trace determination of chromium in drinking water samples by sorption on a conical minicolumn packed with activated carbon (AC) at pH 5.0. The chromium was removed from the minicolumn with 1.0% (v/v) nitric acid. An enrichment factor (EF) of 35-fold for a sample volume of 10 ml was obtained. The detection limit (DL) value for the preconcentration method proposed was 3.0 ng l−1. The precision for 10 replicate determinations at the 0.5 μg l−1 Cr level was 4.0% relative standard deviation (R.S.D.), calculate with the peak heights obtained. The calibration graph using the preconcentration system for chromium was linear with a correlation coefficient of 0.9992 at levels near the detection limits up to at least 50 μg l−1. The method was successfully applied to the determination of Cr(III) and Cr(VI) in drinking water samples.  相似文献   

20.
Chromium is ubiquitous; whereas in small amounts Cr(III) is vital in the diet of humans, Cr(VI) is highly toxic. The latter is commonly found in contaminated waters and brownfields worldwide. Zero-valent iron (Fe0) can detoxify Cr(VI) efficiently by mediating its reduction to Cr(III). In this study, a Cr(VI)-contaminated soil was treated with a surfactant solution (Tween® 20) and the resulting extract was reacted in acidic medium with Fe0. The disappearance of Cr(VI) with time was determined with the 1,5-diphenylcarbazide colorimetric method using single-wavelength spectrophotometry (SWS) and dual-wavelength spectrophotometry (DWS). The major sources of uncertainty in the measurements were identified and calculated in both cases. Over the entire course of the reaction, the uncertainty associated with the mass concentration of Cr(VI), γ(Cr), was decreased appreciably for the DWS method relative to the conventional (SWS) method of quantitation.  相似文献   

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