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1.
Yue XF  Zhang ZQ  Yan HT 《Talanta》2004,62(1):97-101
A new flow injection catalytic spectrophotometric method is proposed for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate based on the catalytic effect of nitrite on the redox reaction between crystal violet and potassium bromate in phosphoric acid medium and nitrate being on-line reduced to nitrite with a cadmium-coated zinc reduction column. The redox reaction is monitored spectrophotometrically by measuring the decrease in the absorbance of crystal violet at the maximum absorption wavelength of 610 nm. A technique of inserting a reduction column into sampling loop is adopted and the flow injection system produces a signal with a shoulder. The height of shoulder in the ascending part of the peak corresponds to the nitrite concentration and the maximum of the peak corresponds to nitrate plus nitrite. The detection limits are 0.3 ng ml−1 for nitrite and 1.0 ng ml−1 for the nitrate. Up to 32 samples can be analyzed per hour with a relative standard deviation of less than 2%. The method has been successfully applied for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in natural waters.  相似文献   

2.
A flow injection (FI) method with flame atomic absorption spectrometry (FAAS) detection was developed for the determination and speciation of nitrite and nitrate in foodstuffs and wastewaters. The method is based on the oxidation of nitrite to nitrate using a manganese(IV) dioxide oxidant microcolumn where the flow of the sample through the microcolumn reduces the MnO2 solid phase reagent to Mn(II), which is measured by FAAS. The absorbance of Mn(II) are proportional to the concentration of nitrite in the samples. The injected sample volume was 400 μL with a sampling rate of analyses was 90 h−1 with a relative standard deviation better than 1.0% in a repeatability study. Nitrate is reduced to nitrite in proposed FI-FAAS system using a copperized cadmium microcolumn and analyzed as nitrite. The calibration curves were linear up to 20 mg L−1 and 30 mg L−1 with a detection limit of 0.07 mg L−1 and 0.14 mg L−1 for nitrite and nitrate, respectively. The results exhibit no interference from the presence of large amounts of ions. The method was successfully applied to the speciation of nitrite and nitrate in spiked natural water, wastewater and foodstuff samples. The precision and accuracy of the proposed method were comparable to those of the reference spectrophotometric method.  相似文献   

3.
Spectrophotometric flow injection methods were developed for the individual determination of nitrite or nitrate, and for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate, in soil samples. Nitrite was determined directly using a modified version of the Griess-Ilosvay diazo-coupling reaction, measuring at 543 nm the absorbance of the azo-dye complex formed. Simultaneous nitrite and nitrate determinations were based on on-line nitrate reduction in a micro column containing copperised cadmium. A single chromogenic reagent containing all the necessary reactants was used in both methods. For determinations, the chemical and instrumental variables were optimised by univariate analysis and simplex chemometric method. The optimised conditions gave a linear calibration range between 0.05 and 1.6 µg m L− 1 for N-NO2 and between 0.05 and 7.0 µg m L− 1 for N-NO3. The detection limits for nitrite and nitrate were 22 µg L− 1 and 44 µg L− 1 respectively. The proposed methods allowed up to 35-40 samples per hour to be analysed with good precision. The simultaneous method was successfully used for the determination of nitrite and nitrate in soil samples (the results obtained were validated against those obtained by reference methods). The proposed methods are simpler and faster than conventional methods and could be routinely used in environmental monitoring laboratories.  相似文献   

4.
A simple, sensitive and selective method for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in water samples has been developed. The method is based on ion-exchange separation, online photochemical reaction, and luminol chemiluminescence detection. The separation of nitrite and nitrate was achieved using an anion-exchange column with a 20 mM borate buffer (pH 10.0). After the separation, these ions were converted to peroxynitrite by online UV irradiation using a low-pressure mercury lamp and then mixed with a luminol solution prepared with carbonate buffer (pH 10.0). The calibration graphs of the nitrite and nitrate were linear in the range from 2.0 × 10−9 to 2.5 × 10−6 M and 2.0 × 10−8 to 2.5 × 10−5 M, respectively. Since the sensitivity of nitrite was about 10 times higher than that of nitrate, the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in the water samples could be efficiently achieved. This method was successfully applied to various water samples – river water, pond water, rain water, commercial mineral water, and tap water – with only filtration and dilution steps.  相似文献   

5.
A rapid, simple miniaturised photometrical method was developed for the determination of nitrate and/or nitrite in freshwater samples. All procedures, including sample buffering, reduction by copperised cadmium granules, colour development and absorbance determination, were completed in a 96-well microplate. The factors governing the nitrate reduction and its recovery were investigated in detail, and the optimised analysing conditions were established. Nitrate was quantitatively reduced by copperised cadmium granules with a high reduction efficiency (96.59 ± 0.96%). The proposed method gave a linear calibration ranging from 0.01 to 1.50 mg L−1 for NO2-N and 0.02 to 1.50 mg L−1 for NO3-N. The detection limits for nitrite and nitrate were 2 and 4 μg L−1, respectively. The proposed method allowed at least 48 samples to be simultaneously analysed in duplicate, with good precision, within 90 min for nitrate and 30 min for nitrite, and was successfully applied to actual freshwater sample analysis with a recovery of 98.02 ± 1.04% for nitrite and 99.72 ± 1.39% for nitrate. This method produced accurate results comparable to standard methods, provided a much higher sample throughput than conventional methods and could be routinely used in actual freshwater sample monitoring.  相似文献   

6.
Triethyloxonium tetrafluoroborate derivatization combined with direct headspace (HS) or SPME-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) is proposed here for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in seawater at micromolar level after conversion to their corresponding volatile ethyl-esters (EtO-NO and EtO-NO2). Isotopically enriched nitrite [15N] and nitrate [15N] are employed as internal standards and for quantification purposes. HS-GC-MS provided instrumental detection limits of 0.07 μM NO2 and 2 μM NO3. Validation of the methodology was achieved by determination of nitrite and nitrate in MOOS-1 (Seawater Certified Reference Material for Nutrients, NRC Canada), yielding results in excellent agreement with certified values. All critical aspects connected with the potential inter-conversion between nitrite and nitrate (less than 10%) were evaluated and corrected for by the use of the isotopically enriched internal standard.  相似文献   

7.
In this work, it was developed a method for the determination of nitrite and nitrate in groundwater by high-resolution continuum source electrothermal molecular absorption spectrometry of NO produced by thermal decomposition of nitrate in a graphite furnace. The NO line at 215.360 nm was used for all analytical measurements and the signal obtained by integrated absorbance of three pixels. A volume of 20 μL of standard solution or groundwater sample was injected into graphite furnace and 5 μL of a 1% (m/v) Ca solution was co-injected as chemical modifier. The pyrolisis and vaporization temperatures established were of 150 and 1300 °C, respectively. Under these conditions, it was observed a difference of thermal stability among the two nitrogen species in the presence of hydrochloric acid co-injected. While that the nitrite signal was totally suppressed, nitrate signal remained nearly stable. This way, nitrogen can be quantified only as nitrate. The addition of hydrogen peroxide provided the oxidation of nitrite to nitrate, which allowed the total quantification of the species and nitrite obtained by difference. A volume of 5 μL of 0.3% (v/v) hydrochloric acid was co-injected for the elimination of nitrite, whereas that hydrogen peroxide in the concentration of 0.75% (v/v) was added to samples or standards for the oxidation of nitrite to nitrate. Analytical curve was established using standard solution of nitrate. The method described has limits of detection and quantification of 0.10 and 0.33 μg mL−1 of nitrogen, respectively. The precision, estimated as relative standard deviation (RSD), was of 7.5 and 3.8% (n = 10) for groundwater samples containing nitrate–N concentrations of 1.9 and 15.2 μg mL−1, respectively. The proposed method was applied to the analysis of 10 groundwater samples and the results were compared with those obtained by ion chromatography method. In all samples analyzed, the concentration of nitrite–N was always below of the limit of quantification of both the methods. The concentrations of nitrate–N varied from 0.58 to 15.5 μg mL−1. No significant difference it was observed between the results obtained by both methods for nitrate–N, at the 95% confidence level.  相似文献   

8.
Biswas S  Chowdhury B  Ray BC 《Talanta》2004,64(2):308-312
A highly sensitive and virtually specific method has been developed for the trace and ultra trace 5 ng ml−1-1 μg ml−1 fluorimetric analysis of nitrite. The method is based on the quenching action of nitrite on the native fluorescence of murexide (ammonium purpurate) [λex=349.0 nm, λem=444.5 nm] in the acid range of 0.045-0.315 (M) H2SO4. The method is very precise and accurate (S.D.=±0.4877 and R.S.D.=0.4878% for the determination of 0.1 μg ml−1 of nitrite in 11 replicates). Relatively large excesses of over 35 cations and anions do not interfere. The proposed technique has been successfully applied for the determination of nitrite and nitrate in ground water, surface water and sea water, nitrite in soil and nitrate in forensic samples. The method has also been extended for the analysis of NOx in air.  相似文献   

9.
Feres MA  Reis BF 《Talanta》2005,68(2):422-428
In this work, a downsized flow set up designed based on multicommutation concept for photometric determination of iron(II)/iron(III) and nitrite/nitrate is surface water is described. The flow system network comprised a set of three-way solenoid valves, reaction coil and a double-channel flow cell, which were nested in order to obtain a compact and small-size instrument. To accomplish the downsizing requirement light source (LED) and radiation detection (phototransistor) were coupled to the flow cell. In order to demonstrated the effectiveness of the system, the photometer methods based on Griess reaction and 1-10-phenantroline for nitrite and iron(II) determination, respectively, were selected. Under computer control the set up provided facilities to handle four reagent solutions employing a single pumping channel, thus permitting also the determination of nitrate and iron(III) after its reduction to nitrite and to iron(II), respectively. The overall system performance was demonstrated working several days running standard solution, no significant variation of base line, linear response range and slop (less than 1%) were observed. The usefulness of the downsized system was ascertained by analyzing a set of surface water. Aiming to access the accuracy sample were also analyzed employing reference procedures and no significant difference at 95% confidence level were observed for the four analytes. Other profitable features such as analytical throughput of 40 determination per hour; relative standard deviation of 1%; linear response range between 50 and 300 μg l−1 for nitrite and nitrate, 0.5-6.0 mg l−1 iron(II) and iron(III); low reagent consumption 75 μg for nitrate/nitrite and 0.6 mg for iron(II)/iron(III) per determination; and 2.4 ml waste generation per determination were also achieved.  相似文献   

10.
Mehmet Akyüz  ?evket Ata 《Talanta》2009,79(3):900-1824
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection (LC-FL) methods have been proposed for the determination of low level nitrite and nitrate in biological, food and environmental samples. The methods include derivatization of aqueous nitrite with 2,3-diaminonaphthalene (DAN), enzymatic reduction of nitrate to nitrite, extraction with toluene and chromatographic analyses of highly fluorescent 2,3-naphthotriazole (NAT) derivative of nitrite by using GC-MS in selected-ion-monitoring (SIM) mode and LC-FL. Nitrite and nitrate ions in solid samples were extracted with 0.5 M aqueous NaOH by sonication. The recoveries of nitrite and nitrate ions based on GC-MS and LC-FL results were 98.40% and 98.10% and the precision of these methods, as indicated by the relative standard deviations (RSDs) were 1.00% for nitrite and 1.20% for nitrate, respectively. The limits of detection of the GC-MS in SIM mode and LC-FL methods based on S/N = 3 were 0.02 and 0.29 pg/ml for nitrite and 0.03 and 0.30 pg/ml for nitrate, respectively.  相似文献   

11.
Zhang M  Zhang Z  Yuan D  Feng S  Liu B 《Talanta》2011,84(2):443-450
An automatic gas-phase molecular absorption spectrometric (GPMAS) system was developed and applied to determine nitrite and total nitrate in water samples. The GPMAS system was coupled with a UV-light emitting diode photodiode (UV-LED-PD) based photometric detector, including a 255 nm UV-LED as the light source, a polyvinyl chloride (PVC) tube of 14 cm as the gas flow cell, and an integrated photodiode amplifier to measure the transmitted light intensity. The UV-LED-PD detector was compact, robust, simple and of low heat production, comparing with detectors used in other GPMAS works. For nitrite measurement, citric acid was used to acidify the sample, and ethanol to catalyze the quantitative formation of NO2. The produced NO2 was purged with air flow into the UV-LED-PD detector, and the gaseous absorbance value was measured. The total nitrate could be determined after being reduced to nitrite with a cadmium column. Limits of detection for nitrite and nitrate were 7 μmol/L and 12 μmol/L, respectively; and linear ranges of 0.021-5 mmol/L for nitrite and 0.036-4 mmol/L for nitrate were obtained. Related standard deviations were 1.81% and 1.08% for nitrite and nitrate, respectively, both at 2 mmol/L. The proposed method has been applied to determine nitrite and total nitrate in some environmental water samples.  相似文献   

12.
A novel approach was developed for nitrate analysis in a FIA configuration with amperometric detection (E = −0.48 V). Sensitive and reproducible current measurements were achieved by using a copper electrode activated with a controlled potential protocol. The response of the FIA amperometric method was linear over the range from 0.1 to 2.5 mmol L−1 nitrate with a detection limit of 4.2 μmol L−1 (S/N = 3). The repeatability of measurements was determined as 4.7% (n = 9) at the best conditions (flow rate: 3.0 mL min−1, sample volume: 150 μL and nitrate concentration: 0.5 mmol L−1) with a sampling rate of 60 samples h−1. The method was employed for the determination of nitrate in mineral water and soft drink samples and the results were in agreement with those obtained by using a recommended procedure. Studies towards a selective monitoring of nitrite were also performed in samples containing nitrate by carrying out measurements at a less negative potential (−0.20 V).  相似文献   

13.
A sensitive reagent-injection flow analysis method for the spectrophotometric determination of nitrate in marine, estuarine and fresh water samples is described. The method is based on the reduction of nitrate in a micro column containing zinc granules at pH 6.5. The nitrite formed is reacted with sulfanilamide and N-(1-naphthyl)ethylene diamine (Griess reagent), and the resulting azo compound is quantified spectrophotometrically at 520 nm. Water samples in the range of 3-700 μg L−1 NO3-N can be processed with a throughput of up to 40 samples per hour, a detection limit of 1.3 μg L−1 and reproducibility of 1.2% RSD (50 μg L−1 NO3-N, n = 10). The proposed method was successfully applied for the determination of nitrate in estuarine waters and the reliability was assessed by the analyses of certified reference materials and recovery experiments. The method is suitable for waters with a wide range of salinities, and was successfully used for more than 3200 underway nitrate measurements aboard SV Pelican1 in the “Two Bays” cruise in January 2010.  相似文献   

14.
A new approach for in situ electrodeposition of a renewable copper layer onto a copper electrode is reported. The active surface was obtained by anodic dissolution of a copper electrode at an appropriate potential and further redeposition of copper ions still remaining at the diffusion layer. Under optimal experimental conditions the peak current response increases linearly with nitrate concentration over a range of 0.1-2.5 mmol L−1. The repeatability of measurements for nitrate was evaluated as 1.8% (N = 15) and the limit of detection of the method was found to be 11 μmol L−1 (S/N = 3). Nitrate contents in two different samples (mineral water and sausages) compared well with those obtained from using the standard Griess protocol at a 95% of confidence level measured by the t-student test. The interference from chloride on the nitrate analysis and the possibility of simultaneous determination of nitrite were also examined.  相似文献   

15.
Zuo Y  Wang C  Van T 《Talanta》2006,70(2):281-285
A simple, fast, sensitive and accurate reversed-phase ion-pair HPLC method for simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in atmospheric liquids and lake waters has been developed. Separations were accomplished in less than 10 min using a reversed-phase C18 column (150 mm × 2.00 mm i.d., 5 μm particle size) with a mobile phase containing 83% 3.0 mM ion-interaction reagent tetrabutylammonium hydroxide (TBA-OH) and 2.0 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 3.9 and 17% acetonitrile (flow rate, 0.4 mL/min). UV light absorption responses at 205 nm were linear over a wide concentration range from 100 μg/mL to the detection limits of 10 μg/L for nitrite and 5 μg/L nitrate. Quantitation was carried out by the peak area method. The relative standard deviation for the analysis of nitrite and nitrate was less than 3.0%. This method was applied for the simultaneous determination of nitrite and nitrate in dew, rain, snow and lake water samples collected in southeast Massachusetts. Nitrate was found being present at 4.79-5.99 μg/mL in dew, 1.20-2.63 μg/mL in rain, 0.32-0.60 μg/mL in snow and 0.12-0.23 μg/mL in lake water. Nitrite was only a minor species in dew (0.62-0.83 μg/mL), rain (<0.005-0.14 μg/mL), snow (0.021-0.032 μg/mL) and lake water (0.12-0.16 μg/mL). High levels of nitrite and nitrate observed in dew water droplets may constitute an important source of hydroxyl radicals in the sunny early morning.  相似文献   

16.
In this work a new electrochemical sensor based on an Ag-doped zeolite-expanded graphite-epoxy composite electrode (AgZEGE) was evaluated as a novel alternative for the simultaneous quantitative determination of nitrate and nitrite in aqueous solutions. Cyclic voltammetry was used to characterize the electrochemical behavior of the electrode in the presence of individual or mixtures of nitrate and nitrite anions in 0.1 M Na2SO4 supporting electrolyte. Linear dependences of current versus nitrate and nitrite concentrations were obtained for the concentration ranges of 1-10 mM for nitrate and 0.1-1 mM for nitrite using cyclic voltammetry (CV), chronoamperometry (CA), and multiple-pulsed amperometry (MPA) procedures. The comparative assessment of the electrochemical behavior of the individual anions and mixtures of anions on this modified electrode allowed determining the working conditions for the simultaneous detection of the nitrite and nitrate anions. Applying MPA allowed enhancement of the sensitivity for direct and indirect nitrate detection and also for nitrite detection. The proposed sensor was applied in tap water samples spiked with known nitrate and nitrite concentrations and the results were in agreement with those obtained by a comparative spectrophotometric method. This work demonstrates that using multiple-pulse amperometry with the Ag-doped zeolite-expanded graphite-epoxy composite electrode provides a real opportunity for the simultaneous detection of nitrite and nitrate in aqueous solutions.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Pan X  Tian K  Jones LE  Cobb GP 《Talanta》2006,70(2):455-459
A simple, sensitive LC-ESI-MS method was optimized for quantitative analysis of octahydro-1,3,5,7-tetranitro-1,3,5,7-tetrazocine (HMX) in environmental samples. Under negative ionization mode, HMX can form adduct ions with various organic acids and salts, including acetic acid, formic acid, propionic acid, ammonium nitrate, ammonium chloride, sodium nitrite, and sodium nitrate. Acetic acid was chosen as additive and the ion, [M + CH3COO] with m/z = 355 was used for selective ion monitoring (SIM) in this study. Good sensitivity was achieved with low acetic acid concentration in the mobile phase and relatively low capillary temperature. The method detection limit was 0.78 pg for HMX in standard solution. Linearity (R2 > 0.9998) was obtained at low concentrations (0.5-50 μg/L). This method has been used to determine HMX concentrations in water samples and lizard egg samples from an animal exposure study.  相似文献   

19.
Filik H  Giray D  Ceylan B  Apak R 《Talanta》2011,85(4):1818-1824
A novel fiber optic spectrophotometric method for nitrite determination in different samples is suggested, based on the reaction of nitrite with Safranin O in acidic medium to form a diazo-safranin, which is subsequently coupled with pyrogallol in alkaline medium to form a highly stable, red azo dye, followed by cloud point extraction (CPE) using a mixed micelle of a nonionic surfactant, Triton X-114, with an anionic surfactant, sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS). The reaction and extraction conditions (e.g., acidity for diazotization and alkalinity for pyrogallol coupling, and other reagent concentrations, time, and tolerance to other ions) were optimized. Linearity was obeyed in a concentration range up to 230 μg L−1, and the detection limit of the method is 0.5 μg L−1 of nitrite ion. The molar absorptivity for nitrite of the Safranin-diazonium salt (?610 nm = 4 × 103 L mol−1 cm−1) existing in literature was greatly enhanced by pyrogallol coupling and CPE enrichment (?592 nm = 1.39 × 105 L mol−1 cm−1). The method was applied to the determination of nitrite in tap water, lake water and milk samples with an optimal preconcentration factor of 20.  相似文献   

20.
In this work, a new, simple and sensitive flow injection catalytic kinetic spectrophotometric determination of nitrite is reported based on catalytic effect of nitrite on the redox reaction between sulfonazo III and potassium bromate in acidic media. The reaction was monitored by measuring the decrease in the absorbance of sulfunazo III at 570 nm. Various chemical (such as the effect of acidity, reagents concentrations) and instrumental parameters (flow rate, reaction coil length, injection volume and temperature) were studied and were optimized. Under the optimum conditions calibration graph was linear in the nitrite concentration ranges of 8.00 × 10−3-3.00 × 10−1 μg/ml (with slope of 2.40) and 3.50 × 10−1-1.80 μg/ml (with slope of 0.42). The detection limit was 6.00 × 10−3 μg/ml of nitrite, the relative standard deviation (n = 10) was 1.25% and 0.88% for 5.00 × 10−2 and 2.00 × 10−1 μg/ml of nitrite respectively. About 60 samples in 1 h can be analyzed. The interfering effects of various chemical species were studied. The method was successfully applied in the determination of nitrite in food and environmental samples.  相似文献   

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