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1.
Donaldson EM 《Talanta》1979,26(11):999-1010
Methods for determining trace and moderate amounts of antimony in copper, nickel, molybdenum, lead and zinc concentrates and in ores are described. Following sample decomposition, antimony is oxidized to antimony(V) with aqua regia, then reduced to antimony(III) with sodium metabisulphite in 6M hydrochloric acid medium and separated from most of the matrix elements by co-precipitation with hydrous ferric and lanthanum oxides. Antimony (>/= 100 mug/g) can subsequently be determined by atomic-absorption spectrophotometry, at 217.6 nm after dissolution of the precipitate in 3M hydrochloric acid. Alternatively, for the determination of antimony at levels of 1 mug/g or more, the precipitate is dissolved in 5M hydrochloric acid containing stannous chloride as a reluctant for iron(III) and thiourea as a complexing agent for copper. Then tin is complexed with hydrofluoric acid, and antimony is separated from iron, tin, lead and other co-precipitated elements, including lanthanum, by chloroform extraction of its xanthate. It is then determined spectrophotometrically, at 331 or 425 nm as the iodide. Interference from co-extracted bismuth is eliminated by washing the extract with hydrochloric acid of the same acid concentration as the medium used for extraction. Interference from co-extracted molybdenum, which causes high results at 331 nm, is avoided by measuring the absorbance at 425 nm. The proposed methods are also applicable to high-purity copper metal and copper- and lead-base alloys. In the spectrophotometric iodide method, the importance of the preliminary oxidation of all of the antimony to antimony(V), to avoid the formation of an unreactive species, is shown.  相似文献   

2.
M Donaldson E 《Talanta》1988,35(1):47-53
A method for determining approximately 0.2 mug/g or more of arsenic in ores, concentrates and related materials is described. After sample decomposition arsenic(V) is reduced to arsenic(III) with titanium(III) and separated from iron, lead, zinc, copper, uranium, tin, antimony, bismuth and other elements by cyclohexane extraction of its xanthate complex from approximately 8-10M hydrochloric acid. After washing with 10M hydrochloric acid-2% thiourea solution to remove residual iron and co-extracted copper, followed by water to remove chloride, arsenic is stripped from the extract with 16M nitric acid and ultimately determined in a 2% nitric acid medium by graphite-furnace atomic-absorption spectrometry, at 193.7 nm, in the presence of thiourea (which eliminates interference from sulphate) and palladium as matrix modifiers. Small amounts of gold, platinum and palladium, which are partly co-extracted as xanthates under the proposed conditions, do not interfere.  相似文献   

3.
Strelow FE  Wienert CH  van der Walt TN 《Talanta》1974,21(11):1183-1191
Indium can be separated from Zn, Pb(II), Ga, Ca, Be, Mg, Ti(IV), Mn(II), Fe(III), Al, U(VI), Na, Ni(II) and Co(II) by selective elution with 0.50M hydrochloric acid in 30% aqueous acetone from a column of AG50W-X8 cation-exchange resin, all the other elements being retained by the column. Lithium is included in the elements retained by the column when 0.35M hydrochloric acid in 45% aqueous acetone is used for eluting indium, but the elution of indium is slightly retarded. Ba, Sr, Zr, Hf, Th, Sc, Y, La and the lanthanides, Rb and Cs should also be retained according to their distribution coefficients. Cd, Bi(III), Au(III), Pt(IV), Pd(II), Rh(III), Mo(VI) and W(VI) can be eluted with 0.20M hydrobromic acid in 50% aqueous acetone before the elution of indium, and Ir(III), Ir(IV), As(III), As(V), Se(IV), Tl(III), Hg(II), Ge(IV), Sb(III) and Sb(V), though not investigated in detail, should accompany these elements. Relevant distribution coefficients and elution curves and results for analyses of synthetic mixtures of indium with other elements are presented.  相似文献   

4.
Donaldson EM 《Talanta》1990,37(10):955-964
A continuous hydride-generation atomic-absorption spectrometric method for determining approximately 0.02 mug/g or more of antimony in ores, concentrates, rocks, soils and sediments is described. The method involves the reduction of antimony(V) to antimony(III) by heating with hypophosphorous acid in a 4.5M hydrochloric acid-tartaric acid medium and its separation by filtration, if necessary, from any elemental arsenic, selenium and tellurium produced during the reduction step. Antimony is subsequently separated from iron, lead, zinc, tin and various other elements by a single cyclohexane extraction of its xanthate complex from approximately 4.5M hydrochloric acid/0.2M sulphuric acid in the presence of ascorbic acid as a reluctant for iron(III). After the extract is washed, if necessary, with 10% hydrochloric acid-2% thiourea solution to remove co-extracted copper, followed by 4.5M hydrochloric acid to remove residual iron and other elements, antimony(III) in the extract is oxidized to antimony(V) with bromine solution in carbon tetrachloride and stripped into dilute sulphuric acid containing tartaric acid. Following the removal of bromine by evaporation of the solution, antimony(V) is reduced to antimony(III) with potassium iodide in approximately 3M hydrochloric acid and finally determined by hydride-generation atomic-absorption spectrometry at 217.8 nm with sodium borohydride as reluctant. Interference from platinum and palladium, which are partly co-extracted as xanthates under the proposed conditions, is eliminated by complexing them with thiosemicarbazide during the iodide reduction step. Interference from gold is avoided by using a 3M hydrochloric acid medium for the hydride-generation step. Under these conditions gold forms a stable iodide complex.  相似文献   

5.
Larsen RP  Oldham RD 《Talanta》1975,22(7):577-580
Plutonium can be rapidly and selectively separated from the elements that interfere in its radiochemical determination, by the use of hydrobromic acid in a hydrohalic acid anion-exchange separation procedure. Plutonium(IV) and (VI) are adsorbed onto the resin column from 9M hydrochloric acid, interfering elements such as americium and thorium are washed from the column with 9M hydrochloric acid, and the plutonium is reduced to plutoniurn(III) and washed from the column with 11M hydrobromic acid. Interfering elements such as uranium and neptunium, which are adsorbed onto the column from 9M hydrochloric acid, are retained there during the hydrochloric and hydrobromic acid washes. This system would also appear to provide the means for effectively separating plutonium from those elements that commonly interfere in such chemical methods of analysis as redox titration.  相似文献   

6.
The extraction characteristics of isooctyl thioglycolate (IOTG), a chelating agent, in various diluents has been studied with respect to the metal ions, tin(IV) and antimony(III), in hydrochloric acid medium. It is concluded that antimony(III) can be separated from tin(IV) with 85% yield and with a decontamination factor of at least 1·105 using IOTG diluted with petroleum ether and 3M HCl medium. Tin(IV) can be separated conveniently from antimony(III) in 2M HCl with 95% yield and with a decontamination factor greater than 7·105 using IOTG diluted with carbon tetrachloride.  相似文献   

7.
Liquid-liquid extraction of uranium (VI) from hydrobromic acid solutions with dibenzo-24-crown-8 in nitrobenzene have been investigated. Uranium(VI) was quantitatively extracted from 6.0–8.0M hydrobromic acid with 0.001–0.01M dibenzo-24-crown-8 and was quantitatively stripped from the organic phase with 0.1–1.0M hydrochloric acid, 0.5–10M nitric acid, 2–10M perchloric acid, 3.0–10M sulfuric acid or 3.0–10M acetic acid. It was possible to separate uranium(VI) from a number of elements in binary mixtures. Most of the elements showed very high tolerance limit Uranium(VI) was also separated from a number of associated elements in multicomponent mixtures. The method is very simple, selective, rapid and highly reproducible (approximately±2%) and was applied to the analysis of uranium in geological samples.  相似文献   

8.
Donaldson EM  Wang M 《Talanta》1986,33(3):233-242
Methods for determining ~ 0.2 mug g or more of silver and cadmium, ~ 0.5 mug g or more of copper and ~ 5 mug g or more of antimony, bismuth and indium in ores, concentrates and related materials are described. After sample decomposition and recovery of antimony and bismuth retained by lead and calcium sulphates, by co-precipitation with hydrous ferric oxide at pH 6.20 +/- 0.05, iron(III) is reduced to iron(II) with ascorbic acid, and antimony, bismuth, copper, cadmium and indium are separated from the remaining matrix elements by a single methyl isobutyl ketone extraction of their iodides from ~2M sulphuric acid-0.1M potassium iodide. The extract is washed with a sulphuric acid-potassium iodide solution of the same composition to remove residual iron and co-extracted zinc, and the extracted elements are stripped from the extract with 20% v v nitric acid-20% v v hydrogen peroxide. Alternatively, after the removal of lead sulphate by filtration, silver, copper, cadmium and indium can be extracted under the same conditions and stripped with 40% v v nitric acid-25% v v hydrochloric acid. The strip solutions are treated with sulphuric and perchloric acids and ultimately evaporated to dry ness. The individual elements are determined in a 24% v v hydrochloric acid medium containing 1000 mug of potassium per ml by atomic-absorption spectrophotometry with an air-acetylene flame. Tin, arsenic and molybdenum are not co-extracted under the conditions above. Results obtained for silver, antimony, bismuth and indium in some Canadian certified reference materials by these methods are compared with those obtained earlier by previously published methods.  相似文献   

9.
An improved spectrophotometric method is proposed for the determination with iodide of trace amounts of bismuth in copper and cartridge brass. The sample is dissolved in nitric acid and the bismuth is separated from the copper by an ammoniacal precipitation in the presence of iron(III) hydroxide as a gathering agent. The hydroxide precipitate is dissolved in hydrochloric acid, sulfuric acid is added, the solution is evaporated to a few ml, hydrobromic acid is added to volatilize the antimony and tin, and the solution is evaporated to fumes of sulfuric acid. The bismuth iodide color is then developed with a composite potassium iodide—sodium hypophosphite reagent. Factors affecting the bismuth iodide color are investigated.  相似文献   

10.
Tri-n-octylphosphine sulfide (TOPS) has been investigated as the stationary phase in reversed-phase partition paper Chromatographie separations using nitric or hydrochloric acids as the mobile phase. TOPS has also been studied as an extractant for metal ions. Silver, mercury (II), and palladium (II) were found to have RF values of zero when nitric acid was used as the mobile phase. These same ions were also selectively extracted from aqueous nitric acid solutions. Gold(III), mercury(II), palladium (II), and platinum (IV) were found to have RF values of zero when hydrochloric acid was used as the mobile phase. However, only gold(III) and mercury(II) were extracted from aqueous hydrochloric acid solutions in liquid-liquid extraction systems. Several separations were successfully performed from 1 M nitric acid.  相似文献   

11.
Victor AH  Strelow FW 《Talanta》1981,28(4):207-214
Zinc and lead can be separated from Cd, Bi(III), In and V(V) by eluting these elements with 0.2M hydrochloric acid in 60% acetone from a column of AG50W-X8 cation-exchange resin, zinc and lead being retained. Mercury(II), Tl(III), As(III), Au(III), Sn(IV), Mo(VI), W(VI) and the platinum metals have not been investigated quantitatively, but from their distribution coefficients, should also be eluted. Vanadium(V), Mo(VI) and W(VI) require the presence of hydrogen peroxide. Zinc and lead can be eluted with 0.5M hydrochloric acid in 60% acetone or 0.5M hydrobromic acid in 65% acetone and determined by AAS; the alkali and alkaline-earth metal ions, Mn(II), Co, Ni, Cu(II), Fe(III), Al, Ga, Cr(III), Ti(IV), Zr, Hf, Th, Sc, Y, La and the lanthanides are retained on the column, except for a small fraction of copper eluted with zinc and lead. Separations are sharp and quantitative. The method has successfully been applied to determination of zinc and lead in three silicate rocks and a sediment.  相似文献   

12.
Yatirajam V  Dhamija S 《Talanta》1979,26(4):317-321
Tungsten, in amounts ranging from micrograms to milligrams, can be extracted into isoamyl alcohol, as the tungsten(V) ferrocyanide complex obtained by reduction of tungsten(VI) with tin(II) in 4M hydrochloric acid containing ferrocyanide. It can thus be separated from iron, cobalt, chromium, manganese, arsenic, antimony, bismuth, silicon, calcium and copper, their precipitation being prevented by addition of glycerol and, in the case of iron, sulphosalicyclic acid. Molybdenum, vanadium and nickel are not separated from tungsten, however. Tungsten can also be determined spectrophotometrically as tungsten(V) ferrocyanide. The absorbance of the brown complex is measured in aqueous solution or preferably after extraction into isoamyl alcohol. As many alloying elements interfere, they should be separated by the ferrocyanide extraction or other suitable method. Both the separation and the determination methods give satisfactory results with an overall error of not more than 0.5% in the analysis of practical samples containing low or high percentages of tungsten.  相似文献   

13.
The solvent extraction of cerium(III) from nitric, hydrochloric and sulphuric acid solutions by 4-(5-nonyl)pyridine oxide and trioctylamine oxide in xylene has been studied. The influence of the concentration of the solvents and salting-out agents is described. From the results of partition experiments attempts have been made to deduce the nature of the extracted species. The investigation shows that cerium(III) can be separated from cerium(IV) from very dilute solutions of mineral acids and also from moderate nitric acid media.  相似文献   

14.
A method is presented for improved separation of 109Cd from silver cyclotron targets. After dissolution of the target material in nitric acid and removal of silver by precipitation with copper metal, at pH 5, the cadmium is separated from zinc, copper and other elements by anion exchange chromatography. The solution in 0.5 M nitric acid plus 0.1 M hydrobromic acid is percolated through a column containing 4 ml of AG1-X8 anion-exchange resin (100–200 mesh), equilibrated with the same acid mixture. Zinc, copper(II) and other elements are eluted with 50 ml of this mixture. Cadmium is retained and finally eluted with 50 ml of 3 M nitric acid. The cadmium is retained much more strongly from the hydrobromic acid mixture than from the 0.02 M hydrochloric acid used for such separations previously; the presence of the strongly absorbed nitrate anion in fairly high concentration completely eliminates the tailing of zinc observed in 0.02 M hydrochloric acid. A typical elution curve and results of quantitative separations are presented.  相似文献   

15.
Donaldson EM 《Talanta》1984,31(11):997-1004
A method for determining approximately 0.2 microg/g or more of germanium in ores, concentrates, zinc-processing products and related materials is described. The sample is decomposed by fusion with sodium peroxide and the cooled melt is dissolved in dilute sulphuric acid. Silica, if > 50 mg, is removed by volatilization with hydrofluoric acid. Germanium is separated from sodium salts by co-precipitation with hydrous ferric oxide, the precipitate is dissolved in 3M hydrochloric acid and germanium is subsequently separated from iron(III) and other co-precipitated elements by a single heptane extraction of germanium tetrachloride from approximately 9.4M hydrochloric acid. The extract is washed with 12M hydrochloric acid to remove residual iron(III), then germanium is stripped with water and determined spectrophotometrically with phenylfluorone in a 1.4M hydrochloric acid-0.002M cetyltrimethylammonium bromide medium in the presence of ascorbic acid as a reductant for co-extracted chlorine. The apparent molar absorptivity of the complex is 1.71 x 10(4) l.mole(-1).mm(-1) at 507 nm, the wavelength of maximum absorption. Up to 5 mg of tin(IV), 10 mg of antimony(V) and tungsten(VI) and approximately 50 mg of silica do not interfere. Germanium values are given for some Canadian certified reference ores, concentrates and iron-formation samples and for a metallurgical dust.  相似文献   

16.
Ejaz M  Siddique E  Ahmed S 《Talanta》1985,32(11):1055-1057
The variation of the partition coefficient of arsenic(III) between chloride-iodide solutions and diphenyl(2-pyridyl)methane in benzene has been studied. The effect of the concentration of hydrochloric acid and iodide in the aqueous phase has been assessed. The partition coefficients are maximal for concentrated acid solutions which are 0.02-0.1 M in potassium iodide. Slope-analysis studies were used to elucidate the composition of the extracted species. Polymerization of the solvent species tends to decrease the distribution coefficients of arsenic with increasing concentration of diphenyl(2-pyridyl)methane, especially with trace concentrations of the element. Arsenic can be selectively separated from copper, cobalt, nickel, iron, chromium and antimony, which are usually associated with it in various ores.  相似文献   

17.
Zusammenfassung Zur Trennung von Tellur aus Lösungen mit komplizierter Zusammensetzung wurde eine kombinierte Extraktionsmethode entwickelt. Die Extraktion von Eisen(III), Arsen(V), Antimon(V), Gold(III), Thallium(III), Wismut(III), Zinn(IV) und Selen(IV) erfolgt mit Diisopropyläther aus 8 M Salzsäure, wobei das gesamte Te(IV) in der wäßrigen Phase verbleibt. Diese wird dann mit Methylisobutylketon aus 4 M Salzsäure extrahiert, während in der wäßrigen Phase Kupfer(II), Aluminium(III), Silber(I), Nickel (II), Kobalt(II), Zink(II), Cadmium(II) und Blei(II) verbleiben. Die vollständige Abtrennung der Begleitelemente des Tellurs erfolgt durch zusätzliche Extraktion ihrer Kupferronate mit Methylisobutylketon bei pH 3–5. Das vorgeschlagene Extraktionsverfahren kann mit jeder bekannten Methode zur Bestimmung geringer Tellurmengen kombiniert werden.
Extraction method for the separation of small quantities of tellurium from accompanying elements
A new combined solvent extraction method is proposed for the separation of tellurium from solutions of complex composition. Iron(III), arsenic(V), antimony(V), gold(III), thallium(III)J bismuth(III), tin(IV) and selenium(IV) are extracted with diisopropyl ether from 8 M hydrochloric acid. Under these conditions tellurium(IV) is quantitatively retained in the aqueous phase. Subsequently tellurium(IV) is extracted from 4 M hydrochloric acid with methylisobutyl ketone, so that copper(II), aluminium(III), silver(I), nickel(II), cobalt(II), zink(II), cadmium(II) and lead(II) remain in. the aqueous phase. The complete separation of the accompanying elements is realized by an additional extraction of their cupferronates with methylisobutyl ketone at pH 3–5. The separation described can be combined with any known method for the determination of small amounts of tellurium(IV).
  相似文献   

18.
Donaldson EM 《Talanta》1977,24(2):105-110
A method for determining 0.0001-1% of arsenic in copper, nickel, molybdenum, lead and zinc concentrates is described. After sample decomposition, arsenic is separated from most of the matrix elements by co-precipitation with hydrous ferric oxide from an ammoniacal medium. Following reprecipitation of arsenic and iron, the precipitate is dissolved in approximately 2 M hydrochloric acid and the solution is evaporated to a small volume to remove water. Arsenic(V) is reduced to the tervalent state with iron(II) and separated from iron, lead and other co-precipitated elements by chloroform extraction of its xanthate from an 11M hydrochloric acid medium. After oxidation of arsenic(III) in the extract to arsenic(V) with bromine-carbon tetrachloride solution, it is back-extracted into water and determined by the molybdenum blue method. Small amounts of iron, copper and molybdenum, which are co-extracted as xanthates, and antimony, which is co-extracted to a slight extent as the chloro-complex under the proposed conditions, do not interfere. The proposed method is also applicable to copper-base alloys.  相似文献   

19.
Extraction of metal ions from chloride solution with N,N-dioctylacetamide   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Pohlandt C  Fritz JS 《Talanta》1979,26(5):395-399
N,N-Di-n-octylacetamide (DOAA) was prepared and shown to be an effective extractant for a number of metal ions from aqueous hydrochloric acid solution. Distribution ratios of 35 metal ions were measured for 1M DOAA in chloroform and hydrochloric acid solutions ranging from 0.10 to 9.0M. Extraction of uranium(VI) from solutions of hydrochloric acid and of nitric acid was compared. The effects of different diluents and varying concentrations of DOAA were studied in an attempt to elucidate the extraction mechanisms involved.  相似文献   

20.
The biological activity of antimony depends on the oxidation state. The Sb(III) and Sb(V) states can be distinguished, even in the ng l?1 range, by coupling extraction with ammonium pyrrlidenedithiocarbamate into methyl isobutyl ketone (APDC/MIBK), or N-benzoyl-N-phenylhydroxylamine (BPHA) into chloroform, with anodic stripping voltammetry (a.s.v.). After complex formation with APDC in acetate-buffered medium, Sb(III), but not Sb(V), is extracted into MIBK and quantified by a.s.v. Antimony(V) is quantified in the aqueous phase after removal of Sb(III) by extraction with BPHA into chloroform from the medium acidified with nitric acid. The applicability of the proposed separation/a.s.v. method is demonstrated for samples of rain, snow and water from a dredging operation. The stability of the two antimony species is examined for natural waters with Sb(III) and Sb(V) added; possibilities of stabilization are described. The precedures should be suitable for speciation of antimony in relatively unpolluted waters.  相似文献   

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