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1.
Talanta ; 61(6): 849-53, 2003 Dec 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18969250

ABSTRACT

Supercritical fluid extraction was used to recover organic and inorganic mercury species. Variations in pressure, water, methanol, and chelator create methods that allowed separation of inorganic from organic mercury species. When extracted using a compromised set of extraction conditions, the order of extraction was methyl, phenyl and inorganic mercury. For the individually optimized conditions, quantitative recoveries were observed. Level as low as 20 ppb were extracted and then determined using ICP.

2.
Talanta ; 51(2): 339-47, 2000 Feb 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18967865

ABSTRACT

In some situations, it is no longer sufficient to give a total concentration of a metal. Instead, what is required to understand the potential toxicity of a sample is the concentration of metal species or oxidation state. When developing species specific methods, the major concern is that the integrity of the species ratio is not changed. In other words, the sample preparation or the analytical method will not convert metal ions from one oxidation state to another. Normal extraction techniques and chromatography methods have shown some tendencies to change species ratios. An ideal extraction method would extract the metal efficiently while retaining the metal's oxidation state. The properties of supercritical fluids should approach the ideal of retention of oxidation states. For example, the need for speciation of chromium is obvious since Cr(III) is considered an essential element while Cr(VI) is thought to be toxic and carcinogenic. This paper presents the results of a species specific extraction of Cr(VI) using two different carbamate derivatives as the chelator. Supercritical fluid extraction (SFE) coupled with a fluorinated dithiocarbamate and a methanol modifier allows extraction of 1 ppm Cr(VI) from a solid matrix with a recovery level of 88.4+/-2.57% using the NIST standard sample. The optimized conditions using the HP 7680 supercritical fluid extractor were: 0.1 ml of methanol, 0.05 ml of pure water, and 0.01 g of chelate via a saturation chamber.

3.
Talanta ; 43(2): 225-32, 1996 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18966482

ABSTRACT

A method for the direct determination of ATP that exhibits reasonable sensitivity, and responds to very few interferants, has been developed. The chelation-enhanced fluorescence between N-(anthracen-9'-yl methyl)tris(3-aminopropyl) amine and adenosine 5'-triphosphate is utilized in this determination. The method was tested in batch and flow-injection analysis (FIA) modes. The typical detection limit for FIA determination of ATP is 1 muM, with a linear range of 0.5-100 ppm. A typical relative standard deviation at 20 ppm is 2.3%.

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