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1.
Inagaki K Takatsu A Kuroiwa T Nakama A Eyama S Chiba K Okamoto K 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2004,378(5):1271-1276
Two types of sediment reference material (NMIJ 7302-a and 7303-a) for trace elements analysis have been prepared and certified by the National Metrology Institute of Japan in the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (NMIJ/AIST). The original materials were collected from a bay near industrial activity in Kyushu (NMIJ CRM 7302-a; marine sediment) and from Lake Biwa (NMIJ CRM 7303-a; lake sediment). The sediment materials were air-dried, sieved, homogenized, packaged in 1000 glass bottles (60 g each), and radiation sterilized. Certification of these CRM for trace elements was conducted by NMIJ, where each element was determined by at least two independent analytical techniques. Isotope-dilution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP–MS) was applied for certification of all the elements except mono-nuclide elements such as As and Co. Other techniques such as ICP–MS with quadrupole mass spectrometry and sector-field mass spectrometry, inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP–AES), and atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS), were also used. Certified values have been provided for 14 elements (Sb, As, Cd, Cr, Co, Cu, Pb, Hg, Mo, Ni, Se, Ag, Sn, and Zn) in both CRM. 相似文献
2.
K. Ishikawa N. Hanari Y. Shimizu T. Ihara T. Maeda A. Nomura T. Yarita K. Kato K. Chiba 《Accreditation and quality assurance》2008,13(7):397-408
Certified reference materials (CRMs) are playing an increasingly important role in environmental monitoring in Japan. The
National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ)/National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (AIST) has been
developing CRMs of organic calibration solutions since 2003, and has issued several NMIJ CRMs. The development of these materials
was conducted at the NMIJ in cooperation with candidate material producers. The freezing-point depression method was principally
adopted for assessment of the purity of starting materials to give reliable certified values. Gas chromatography with flame
ionization detection (GC–FID) and/or high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), which are based on independent principles
and whose levels of accuracy are well evaluated, were applied in combination with other methods to avoid any possible analytical
bias. Purity assessment is outlined for two typical examples, 1,1-dichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (p,p′-DDD) and 1,1,1-trichloro-2,2-bis(p-chlorophenyl)ethane (p,p′-DDT), which were used as starting materials for a CRM under development. Methods adopted for gravimetric preparation and
ampouling of solutions were qualified and optimized to reduce the uncertainties of certified values due to these factors.
Furthermore, a new experimental scheme for assessment of stability and preparation variation is proposed for the proper estimation
of uncertainties.
Presented at BERM-11, October 2007, Tsukuba, Japan. 相似文献
3.
Numata M Aoyagi Y Matsuo M Ishikawa K Hanari N Otsuka S Tsuda Y Yarita T 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2008,391(6):1985-1995
Four mineral oil certified reference materials (CRMs), NMIJ CRM 7902-a, CRM 7903-a, CRM 7904-a, and CRM 7905-a, have been
issued by the National Metrology Institute of Japan, which is part of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science
and Technology (NMIJ/AIST), for the determination of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). The raw materials for the CRMs were
an insulation oil (CRM 7902-a and CRM 7903-a) and a fuel oil (CRM7904-a and CRM 7905-a). A solution of PCB3, PCB8, and technical
PCB products, comprising four types of Kaneclor, was added to the oil matrices. The total PCB concentrations in the PCB-fortified
oils (CRM 7902-a and CRM 7904-a) are approximately 6 mg kg−1. In addition, the mineral oils which were not fortified with PCBs were also distributed as CRMs (CRM 7903-a and CRM 7905-a).
Characterization of these CRMs was conducted by the NMIJ/AIST, where the mineral oils and the PCB solution were analyzed using
multiple analytical methods such as dimethylsulfoxide extraction, normal-phase liquid chromatography, gel permeation chromatography,
reversed-phase liquid chromatography, and chromatography using sulfoxide-bonded silica; and/or various capillary columns for
gas chromatography, and two ionization modes for mass spectrometry. The target compounds in the mineral oils and those in
the PCB solution were determined by one of the primary methods of measurement, isotope dilution–mass spectrometry (ID-MS).
Certified values have been provided for 11 PCB congeners (PCB3, 8, 28, 52, 101, 118, 138, 153, 180, 194, and 206) in the CRMs.
These CRMs have information values for PCB homologue concentrations determined by using a Japanese official method for determination
of PCBs in wastes and densities determined with an oscillational density meter. Because oil samples having arbitrary PCB concentrations
between respective property values of the PCB-fortified and nonfortified CRMs can be prepared by gravimetric mixing of the
CRM pairs, these CRMs can be used for validation of PCB analyses using various instruments which have different sensitivities.
Figure Preparation and certification processes of the mineral oil CRMs (example shown is polychlorinated biphenyls in insulation
oil, high/low concentrations)
Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. 相似文献
4.
Numata M Yarita T Aoyagi Y Tsuda Y Yamazaki M Takatsu A Ishikawa K Chiba K Okamaoto K 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2007,387(7):2313-2323
Two marine sediment certified reference materials, NMIJ CRM 7304-a and 7305-a, have been issued by the National Metrology
Institute of Japan in the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (NMIJ/AIST) for the determination
of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and organochlorine pesticides (OCPs). The raw materials of the CRMs were collected from
a bay near industrial activity in Japan. Characterization of these CRMs was conducted by NMIJ, where the sediments were analyzed
using multiple analytical methods such as pressurized liquid extraction (PLE), microwave-assisted extraction (MAE), saponification,
Soxhlet extraction, supercritical fluid extraction (SFE), and ultrasonic extraction; the target compounds were determined
by one of the primary methods of measurements, isotope dilution–mass spectrometry (ID-MS). Certified values have been provided
for 14 PCB congeners (PCB numbers 3, 15, 28, 31, 70, 101, 105, 138, 153, 170, 180, 194, 206, 209) and 4 OCPs (γ-HCH, 4,4′-DDT,
4,4′-DDE, 4,4′-DDD) in both CRMs. NMIJ CRM 7304-a has concentrations of the contaminants that are a factor of 2–15 greater
than in CRM 7305-a. Both CRMs have information values for PCB homolog concentrations determined by collaborative analysis
using a Japanese official method for determination of PCBs. The total PCB concentrations in the CRMs are approximately 920
and 86 μg kg−1 dry mass respectively.
Electronic supplementary material Supplementary material is available in the online version of this article at and is accessible for authorized users. 相似文献
5.
Nobuyasu Hanari Nobuyasu Itoh Keiichiro Ishikawa Ryoko Iwasawa Yoshie Aoyagi Takashi Yarita 《International journal of environmental analytical chemistry》2013,93(6):692-705
A new calibration solution reference material for the determination of perfluorooctane sulfonate anion (PFOS) and its salts has been issued as a certified reference material (CRM) by the National Metrology Institute of Japan, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (NMIJ/AIST). The purity amount-of-substance fraction of raw material potassium perfluorooctane sulfonate (K-PFOS) was evaluated based on the results obtained using the freezing point depression method, and the purity mass fraction of the raw material was calculated using the average molar mass of impurities, the molar mass of K-PFOS, and the purity amount-of-substance fraction. The certified concentration of this CRM was obtained by multiplying the dilution ratio of the raw material in a prepared solution (methanol) determined from the gravimetric blending method by the purity of the raw material. The preparation concentration of K-PFOS as a certified value of NMIJ CRM 4220-a was determined to be 9.93?mg?kg?1. In addition, the standard uncertainty of the certified value was evaluated from the purity evaluation as well as from sample inhomogeneity, instability, and preparation variation obtained from LC/MS measurements of different gravimetrically prepared solutions of the NMIJ CRM. Consequently, the expanded uncertainty was estimated to be 0.15?mg?kg?1 with a coverage factor k?=?2 corresponding to the half-width of estimated confidence interval of approximately 95%. 相似文献
6.
Availability of reference materials: COMAR the database for certified reference materials 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
COMAR is the international database for certified reference materials. A new user-friendly web-based version, COMAR2, has been developed by BAM and CONET Consulting AG which will be available in December 2002. The advantages of COMAR2 are briefly explained.Presented at the International ILAC/IAF Conference on Accreditation in Global Trade, 23-25 September 2002, Berlin, Germany 相似文献
7.
Narukawa T Chiba K Kuroiwa T Yarita T Takatsu A 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2007,389(2):661-666
An arsenobetaine [(CH3)3As+CH2COO−] solution reference material, NMIJ CRM 7901-a, intended for use in the speciation of arsenic compounds, was developed and
certified by the National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ), part of the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science
and Technology (AIST). The high-purity arsenobetaine powder was synthesized from trimethylarsine [(CH3)3As], and it was dissolved in water in order to prepare 20 mg kg−1 of arsenobetaine standard solution. The solution was bottled in 500 bottles (each containing 10 ml). Certification of the
CRM for arsenobetaine was conducted by NMIJ. The concentration of As was determined by four independent analytical techniques
(ICP–MS, ICP–OES, GFAAS and LC–ICP–MS), and each result was converted to the arsenobetaine concentration by applying an appropriate
factor. The arsenobetaine concentration in the CRM was thus certified. 相似文献
8.
Certified reference material for quantification of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in sediment from the National Metrology Institute of Japan 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Nobuyasu Itoh Yoshie Aoyagi Akiko Takatsu Takashi Yarita 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2009,393(8):2039-2049
The National Metrology Institute of Japan has issued a certified reference material (CRM) of freshwater lake sediment for
polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAHs) analyses. The certification used three extraction techniques: pressurized liquid extraction
(PLE) with toluene, PLE with dichloromethane/ethyl acetate (1:1 by volume), and alkaline extraction (1 M KOH in methanol)
in combination with microwave-assisted extraction. Both gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) and liquid chromatography/dopant-assisted
atmospheric pressure photoionization/MS (LC/DA-APPI/MS) analyses were used. Certified values are provided for 18 PAHs at 1–25 μg
kg−1 except for perylene (2.08 × 103 μg kg−1), and information values are provided for two. Since the values of PAHs in the CRM are much lower than those in other CRMs
and are comparable to those found at sites with little human influence, the CRM is suitable for PAH monitoring in sediment
and soil samples. 相似文献
9.
Certified reference materials for inorganic and organic contaminants in environmental matrices 总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2
Ulberth F 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2006,386(4):1121-1136
Chemical measurements often constitute the basis for informed decision-making at different levels in society; sound decision-making
is possible only if the quality of the data used is uncompromised. To guarantee the reliability and comparability of analytical
data an intricate system of quality-assurance measures has to be put into effect in a laboratory. Reference materials and,
in particular, certified reference materials (CRMs) are essential for achieving traceability and comparability of measurement
results between laboratories and over time. As in any other domain of analytical chemistry, techniques used to monitor the
levels and fate of contaminants in the environment must be calibrated using appropriate calibration materials, and the methods
must be properly validated using fit-for-purpose matrix-matched CRMs, to ensure confidence in the data produced. A sufficiently
large number of matrix CRMs are available for analysis of most elements, and the group of chemicals known as persistent organic
pollutants, in environmental compartments and biota. The wide variety of analyte/level/matrix/matrix property combinations
available from several suppliers enables analysts to select CRMs which sufficiently match the properties of the samples they
analyse routinely. Materials value-assigned for the so-called emerging pollutants are scarce at the moment, though an objective
of current development programmes of CRM suppliers is to overcome this problem. 相似文献
10.
Trends in the certification of reference materials 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
Adriaan M. H. van der Veen 《Accreditation and quality assurance》2004,9(4-5):232-236
The certification of reference materials is still a rapidly developing area. Mostly driven by demands from laboratories, new reference materials are produced, and even new categories of materials are developed, such as genetically modified organism materials or materials for qualitative analysis. Even in more classical areas, such as the certification of chemicals for purity, there are important new insights, in particular in modelling the measurements and the property values. Laboratories are asking increasingly for uncertainty budgets of reference materials that are compatible with the concepts of the Guide to the expression of uncertainty in measurement, thus putting stronger demands to improve not only the quality of the materials, but also of the science and technology behind a certification. Three important issues are highlighted to exemplify these trends: the further interpretation of homogeneity and stability data, the appreciation of asymmetry due to mathematical constraints (relevant for, e.g., purity and trace analysis), and the certification of reference materials for qualitative measurement.Presented at BERM-9—9th International Symposium on Biological and Environmental Reference Materials, 15–19June 2003, Berlin, Germany 相似文献
11.
J. Yoshinaga Y. Shibata T. Horiguchi M. Morita 《Accreditation and quality assurance》1997,2(3):154-156
The National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES) recently prepared two candidate certified reference materials (CRMs)
for arsenicals to meet the growing demand for the quality assurance of arsenic speciation analysis. The NIES candidate CRM
No. 14 Brown Alga was prepared from Hijiki seaweed for the certification of inorganic arsenic content, and No. 15 Scallop was prepared from adductor muscle of scallop
for the certification of arsenobetaine content. The preparation of the candidate CRMs is briefly described. Cooperative analyses
for total arsenic content of the candidate CRMs have been underway. The preliminary speciation analysis at NIES revealed difficulty
in establishing suitable conditions for extracting arsenic species from the materials. Chromatograms of arsenic species by
a high performance liquid chromatography-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometric detection system are presented to provide
information about arsenic species present in these candidate CRMs. 相似文献
12.
Purity certified reference materials (CRMs) are playing a key role in metrological traceability, because they form the basis
for many traceability chains in chemistry. Recently, the National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ) has developed two purity
CRMs for creatinine (NMIJ CRM 6005-a) and urea (NMIJ CRM 6006-a), because the concentrations of these two compounds are frequently
measured in clinical laboratories for monitoring the renal functions. In the certification of purity CRMs, it is essential
that the materials have been thoroughly characterized for purity, and the purity should preferably be determined directly
by a primary method of measurements. In the development of these two CRMs, we used the purified materials as candidates. The
certified values were assigned based on the results of two different methods; acidimetric titration and nitrogen determination
by the Kjeldahl method. Since both methods cannot distinguish some impurities from the target compounds, major impurities
in the candidate materials were also identified, quantified, and subtracted. These CRMs can provide a traceability link between
routine clinical methods and SI units.
Presented at BERM-11, October 2007, Tsukuba, Japan. 相似文献
13.
A semi-preparative high-performance liquid chromatography process was evaluated as a tool to quantitatively determine the
purity or percentage mass fraction content (% m/m) of organic compounds. The method is simple and does not require the identification and subsequent quantitation of organic-related
structure impurities. A protocol was developed and tested on four reference materials certified for purity from 95% m/m to 99.3% m/m. Comparing the purity results of each certified reference material using the new approach with their respective certified
values showed no significant analytical bias. Semi-preparative high-performance liquid chromatography has proved the potential
to be a primary method directly traceable to mass with an uncertainty statement written down also in terms of mass with expanding
uncertainty ranging from 0.8% to 1.3% m/m compared to 0.3 to 2.0% m/m for the certified purity values at the 95% confidence interval. 相似文献
14.
Nobuyasu Hanari Nobuyasu Itoh Ryoko Iwasawa Yoshie Aoyagi Masahiko Numata 《International journal of environmental analytical chemistry》2018,98(1):56-66
A certified reference material (CRM) for the determination of perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) in acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS) resin (NMIJ CRM 8155-a) has been issued by the National Metrology Institute of Japan (NMIJ). The bulk material was prepared by mixing commercial ABS resin powder and potassium PFOS and cut into square plates (20 × 20 mm, 2 mm thick) as the CRM. Analytical processes combined with isotope-dilution mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry were optimised and applied for characterisation. One of the approaches adopted by NMIJ for certification is that results from two or more primary methods of measurement should be used; thus, two optimised isotope-dilution mass spectrometric methods (Methods 1 and 2 with reprecipitation and with reprecipitation/solid phase extraction, respectively, were validated mutually and employed) were used to determine the certified value. Homogeneity and stability of the square plates were evaluated and their uncertainty contributions (as relative standard uncertainties) were 1.43% for inhomogeneity and 6.96% for approximately two years’ instability. The certified mass fraction of linear PFOS (heptadecafluoro-1-octanesulfonic acid) in the CRM with expanded uncertainty (coverage factor k = 2, approximately 95% confidence interval) was (33.1 ± 5.0) mg kg?1 as free acid of PFOS. 相似文献
15.
Inagaki K Kuroiwa T Narukawa T Yarita T Takatsu A Okamoto K Chiba K 《Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry》2008,391(6):2047-2054
A new cod fish tissue certified reference material, NMIJ CRM 7402-a, for methylmercury analysis was certified by the National
Metrological Institute of Japan in the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology (NMIJ/AIST). Cod fish
was collected from the sea close to Japan. The cod muscle was powdered by freeze-pulverization and was placed into 600 glass
bottles (10 g each), which were sterilized with γ-ray irradiation. The certification was carried out using species-specific
isotope dilution gas chromatography inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (SSID–GC–ICPMS), where 202Hg-enriched methylmercury (MeHg) was used as the spike compound. In order to avoid any possible analytical biases caused by
nonquantitative extraction, degradation and/or formation of MeHg in sample preparations, two different extraction methods
(KOH/methanol and HCl/methanol extractions) were performed, and one of these extraction methods utilized two different derivatization
methods (ethylation and phenylation). A double ID method was adopted to minimize the uncertainty arising from the analyses.
In order to ensure not only the reliability of the analytical results but also traceability to SI units, the standard solution
of MeHg used for the reverse-ID was prepared from high-purity MeHg chloride and was carefully assayed as follows: the total
mercury was determined by ID–ICPMS following aqua regia digestion, and the ratio of Hg as MeHg to the total Hg content was
estimated by GC–ICPMS. The certified value given for MeHg is 0.58 ± 0.02 mg kg−1 as Hg.
Figure NMIJ CRM 7402-a: cod fish tissue for MeHg analysis 相似文献
16.
Biological reference materials for elemental speciation were prepared at the National Institute for Environmental Studies. A new human hair reference material, prepared by cryogenic grinding using a ceramic disc mill, is in the process of certification for methyl-Hg and trace elements. Hijiki seaweed reference material was prepared for As speciation studies, primarily for use in the analysis of As(V). Scallop tissue reference material will be certified for arsenobetaine. 相似文献
17.
This paper describes the COMAR database for certified reference materials (CRMs). The Web-based version of COMAR is freely
accessible via the Internet. COMAR was established to assist laboratories in finding the CRMs needed. The database is maintained
in a collaboration of the world’s major CRM producers. The planned changes in the database as agreed at the last COMAR council
meeting in Prague in May 2006 are indicated.
相似文献
Thomas SteigerEmail: |
18.
Issues of current interest to certified reference material producers are addressed. Alternative strategies for certification of matrix reference materials are discussed and the benefits of adopting a flexible, cost-effective approach are described. The difficulty of undertaking homogeneity testing where certification is to be carried out with definitive techniques capable of providing very small measurement uncertainty is discussed. Methodology is described which combines conventional screening of the candidate material for homogeneity with an additional, precise assessment of homogeneity based on isotope dilution mass spectrometry measurements. A systematic procedure for evaluating the commutability (horizontal traceability or scope) of matrix reference materials has been evaluated and shows that in some circumstances matrix effects may be less pervasive than is generally believed. This offers the possibility, especially for trace analysis applications, of more efficient use of existing reference materials without compromising measurement reliability. Vertical traceability of matrix reference material data is of growing interest but is difficult to achieve with present interlaboratory certification exercises. A modification is described which attempts to address this issue. It also offers the possibility of improved identification of outliers and reduced variation of data between the participating laboratories.Presented at BERM-9—9th International Symposium on Biological and Environmental Reference Materials, 15–19June 2003, Berlin, Germany 相似文献
19.
N. Sagara T. Kondo M. Saeki I. Inamoto K. Kakita 《Accreditation and quality assurance》1997,2(3):120-129
ISO 9000 series strictly requires traceability to national or international measurement standards. It is becoming more necessary
to make clear the concept of traceability of measurement standards with respect to chemical composition and to accredit the
reference material producers. In Japan, the accreditation system for reference material producers is considered to satisfy
the requirement of ISO Guide 34, ISO 9000 series and ISO/IEC Guide 25, while the producer fulfills the concept of traceability
of measurement standards. This paper describes the production of iron and steel reference materials in Japan relating to the
international standardization of methods (written standards) and accreditation of reference material producers.
Received: 11 October 1996 Accepted: 5 December 1996 相似文献