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1.
Fresenius J Anal Chem ; 370(2-3): 131-3, 2001 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11451223

ABSTRACT

The environmental CRMs currently available from NRC Ottawa comprise four natural waters for trace elements, four biological tissues for trace elements and methylmercury, three marine sediments for major and trace elements (one sediment has certified values for butyltins) and one fish tissue for organochlorines (PCBs, dioxins). Although significant effort has been expended to maintain this suite of materials, several new initiatives have also recently been completed or are in progress. The certified value for arsenobetaine in Dogfish Muscle CRM DORM-2 has been established. The certification approaches, as well as the studies to determine extraction efficiency of this organoarsenic compound, are presented. A stability study has been completed for Hg in a natural water sample and plans are underway for production of a CRM. Assessment of micronutrient stability in seawater for the purposes of CRM production is continuing and progress on this initiative is discussed.


Subject(s)
Environmental Monitoring/standards , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Animals , Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/methods , Chemistry Techniques, Analytical/standards , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Fresh Water/analysis , Mercury/analysis , Mercury/standards , Reference Standards , Seawater/chemistry , Trace Elements/analysis , Trace Elements/standards , Water Pollutants, Chemical/standards
2.
Analyst ; 123(6): 1215-8, 1998 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9764507

ABSTRACT

A simple, rapid and reliable method was developed for the determination of total mercury in biological samples. Samples were solubilized using tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH). The organically bound mercury was cleaved and converted to inorganic mercury by on-line addition of KMnO4. The decomposed mercury together with inorganic mercury originally present in samples was determined by flow injection cold vapour atomic absorption spectrometry after reduction to elemental mercury vapour using NaBH4. A sample throughput of 100 measurements per hour was achieved after a 30 min dissolution with TMAH. The relative standard deviation for 20 micrograms l-1 Hg was 1.3% (n = 11) and the limit of detection was 0.1 microgram l-1 (3 sigma). The proposed method was validated by the analysis of a suite of certified marine biological reference materials, DORM-2 (dogfish muscle), DOLT-2 (dogfish liver) and TORT-2 (lobster hepatopancreas), with calibration against simple HgII standards.


Subject(s)
Mercury/analysis , Flow Injection Analysis , Humans , Quaternary Ammonium Compounds , Spectrophotometry, Atomic
3.
Talanta ; 47(2): 439-45, 1998 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18967344

ABSTRACT

A rapid and simple on-line method is described for the preconcentration of Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd and Pb from sea water using 8-hydroxyquinoline immobilized onto silicone tubing (Sil-8-HQ) via the Mannich reaction. Recoveries between 35 and 95% and limits of detection in the ppt range were obtained using a 2 m long Sil-8-HQ tube with a sample flow rate of 1.0 ml min(-1). A tube could be subjected to sample loading and elution cycles over 200 times. The capacity was 1.5 and 1.3 mug cm(-2) for Cu and Mn, respectively. Cu, Cd, Co, Pb, Mn, Zn and Ni were determined in coastal and open ocean seawater using flow injection inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (FI-ICP-MS). Good agreement with certified values for the certified reference materials NASS-4 and CASS-3 was demonstrated when quantitation was undertaken by the method of additions.

4.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 356(7): 416-419, 1996 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15045221

ABSTRACT

The determination of Cr in National Research Council of Canada Marine Sediment Reference Material BCSS-1 is addressed. Mixed acid digestions utilizing HF, HClO(4) and HNO(3) were investigated. Single microwave assisted digestions in closed vessels at medium pressures (8 bar) were inappropriate (80% recovery). Double digestion at moderate pressure and digestions at high pressure (70 bar) or lengthy open-beaker hot plate dissolutions resulted in 93+/-5% recovery of certified Cr content. Flame atomic absorption and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry were used for quantitation. In all cases, the method of standard additions was necessary to eliminate the approximately 10% enhancement in re- sponce relative to unmatched standards. Compared to a certified content of 123+/-7 microg/g (mean and standard deviation), values of 116+/-6 were obtained using an open beaker digestion; 114+/-5 using a double microwave digestion at 8 bar; 113+/-2 for microwave digestion at high pressure and 111+/-4 at high pressure (81 bar) with triple microwave digestion in a Parr bomb. No acid dissolution procedure is adequate for Cr in this sample although recovery of total Cr is complete from National Institute of Standards and Technology Buffalo River Sediment (SRM 2704).

7.
Talanta ; 29(3): 167-71, 1982 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18963107

ABSTRACT

A reversed-phase liquid chromatographic technique based on a combination of multielement chelation by 8-hydroxyquinoline with subsequent adsorption on C(18)-bonded silica gel is described for the concentration of Cd, Zn, Cu, Ni, Co, Mn and Fe from sea-water. Enrichment factors of 50-100 are readily obtained following elution of the absorbate with methanol to provide a matrix-free concentrate suitable for graphite-furnace atomic-absorption analysis. Quantitative recovery of these elements from near-shore samples of sea-water is demonstrated and the accuracy and precision of the technique are discussed.

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