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1.
J Anal At Spectrom ; 37: 898-909, 2022 Mar 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35903413

RESUMO

Three 1 2 mass oriented rare earth element (REE) M2+ correction approaches (fixed factor, a dual internal standard, and an in-sample) are evaluated for use in an ICP-MS environmental method update. The multi-variant-based evaluation includes analyzing the same 19 REE-fortified matrices on eight different days over a two-month period using two instrument tunes. These REE-fortified matrices were also analyzed using HR-ICP-MS and ICP-MS/MS to estimate the reference value for use in the principal component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical modeling evaluation. A fixed factor is unable to compensate for matrix and mass dependent drift and because of this it generates the largest across matrix, tune, and day 95th percent confidence bounds for the REE corrections on both As (1.1 ppb) and Se (23 ppb) using samples fortified with 100 ppb Nd, Sm & Gd. The PCA analysis indicated that M2+ ions cluster together across matrix, tune and day better than M1+ and these tighter correlations are reflected in reduced 95th percentile confidence bounds for dual M2+ internal standards (M2+; As = 0.3 ppb; Se = 5.4 ppb; n = 704) relative to M1+ internal standards (M1+; As = 0.6 ppb; Se = 12.0 ppb; n = 1056). The use of an in-sample M2+ correction produced comparable 95th percent confidence bounds (As = 0.2 ppb; Se = 3.4 ppb; n = 352) relative to the M2+ internal standard approaches. Finally, the hierarchical modeling indicated M2+ ions as internal standards tend to minimize the across day variability induced by cone changes and the daily reoccurring matrix shifts in the M2+/M1+ ratio associated with 250 ppm matrices of Na, Ca, and Mg. This internal standard driven reduction in variability can be beneficial in compliance monitoring methods.

2.
J Anal At Spectrom ; 34(10): 2094-2104, 2019 Oct 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32280153

RESUMO

Rare earth elements (REE) can produce M2+ ions in ICP-MS and 150Nd2+, 150Sm2+, and 156Gd2+ can produce false positives on 75As and 78Se. Alternative instrumental tuning conditions, that utilize lower He flows within the collision cell, reduce these false positives by a factor of 2 (to 0.8 ppb As and 19 ppb Se in solutions containing 50 ppb Nd and Gd) with comparable 16O35Cl+ reduction (<100 ppt false 51V in 0.4% HCl) and Se sensitivity (DL < 1 ppb). Further reduction of these false positives is achieved by estimating the M2+ correction factors and utilizing them in the interference-correction software. Approaches to estimating the M2+ correction factor were evaluated with an emphasis on techniques that tolerate daily variability in end-user backgrounds and their ability to reduce the initial and ongoing purity requirements associated with the rare earth standards used to estimate the M2+ correction factor. The direct elemental and polyatomic overlaps associated with unit-mass approaches tend to overcorrect as non-rare-earth signals as small as 30 cps at the unit mass can induce bias relative to the <300 cps signals associated with the M2+ from a 50 ppb REE standard solution. Alternatively, shifting the M2+ estimate to a half mass (i.e., m/z 71.5: 143Nd2+) eliminates the direct overlap source of bias and allows the unit mass signal to approach 150000 cps before it bleeds over on the 1/2 mass because of abundance sensitivity limitations. The performance of the half-mass approach was evaluated in reagent water and regional tap waters fortified with Nd, Sm, and Gd at 2 ppb and 50 ppb. In addition, a half-mass in-sample approach was also evaluated. This approach was found to be beneficial relative to the external or fixed-factor half-mass approach as it could compensate for instrument drift and matrix-induced shifts in the M2+ factors. Finally, all results were evaluated relative to the As and Se concentrations determined using an ICP-QQQ in mass shift mode and a high-resolution ICP-MS.

3.
J Agric Food Chem ; 57(6): 2096-104, 2009 Mar 25.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19292459

RESUMO

Analysis of an individual's total daily food intake may be used to determine aggregate dietary ingestion of given compounds. However, the resulting composite sample represents a complex mixture, and measurement of such can often prove to be difficult. In this work, an analytical scheme was developed for the determination of 12 select pyrethroid pesticides in dietary samples. In the first phase of the study, several cleanup steps were investigated for their effectiveness in removing interferences in samples with a range of fat content (1-10%). Food samples were homogenized in the laboratory, and preparatory techniques were evaluated through recoveries from fortified samples. The selected final procedure consisted of a lyophilization step prior to sample extraction. A sequential 2-fold cleanup procedure of the extract included diatomaceous earth for removal of lipid components followed with a combination of deactivated alumina and C(18) for the simultaneous removal of polar and nonpolar interferences. Recoveries from fortified composite diet samples (10 microg kg(-1)) ranged from 50.2 to 147%. In the second phase of this work, three instrumental techniques [gas chromatography-microelectron capture detection (GC-microECD), GC-quadrupole mass spectrometry (GC-quadrupole-MS), and GC-ion trap-MS/MS] were compared for greatest sensitivity. GC-quadrupole-MS operated in selective ion monitoring (SIM) mode proved to be most sensitive, yielding method detection limits of approximately 1 microg kg(-1). The developed extraction/instrumental scheme was applied to samples collected in an exposure measurement field study. The samples were fortified and analyte recoveries were acceptable (75.9-125%); however, compounds coextracted from the food matrix prevented quantitation of four of the pyrethroid analytes in two of the samples considered.


Assuntos
Análise de Alimentos/métodos , Contaminação de Alimentos/análise , Cromatografia Gasosa-Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Inseticidas/análise , Piretrinas/análise , Cromatografia Gasosa/métodos , Gorduras na Dieta/análise , Liofilização , Espectrometria de Massas em Tandem/métodos
4.
J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol ; 17(4): 331-49, 2007 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16736054

RESUMO

In support of planning efforts for the National Children's Study, we conducted a study to test field methods for characterizing pesticide exposures to 20 farmworker children aged 5-27 months old living in the Salinas Valley of Monterey County, California. We tested methods for collecting house dust, indoor and outdoor air, dislodgeable residues from surfaces and toys, residues on clothing (sock and union suits), food, as well as spot and overnight diaper urine samples. We measured 29 common agricultural and home use pesticides in multiple exposure media samples. A subset of organophosphorus (OP), organochlorine (OC) and pyrethroid pesticides were measured in food. We also analyzed urine samples for OP pesticide metabolites. Finally, we administered four field-based exposure assessment instruments: a questionnaire; food diary; home inspection; and a self-administered child activity timeline. Pesticides were detected more frequently in house dust, surface wipes, and clothing than other media, with chlorpyrifos, diazinon, chlorthal-dimethyl, and cis- and trans-permethrin detected in 90% to 100% of samples. Levels of four of these five pesticides were positively correlated among the house dust, sock, and union suit samples (Spearman's rho=0.18-0.76). Pesticide loading on socks and union suits was higher for the group of 10 toddlers compared to the 10 younger crawling children. Several OP pesticides, as well as 4,4'-DDE, atrazine, and dieldrin were detected in the food samples. The child activity timeline, a novel, low-literacy instrument based on pictures, was successfully used by our participants. Future uses of these data include the development of pesticide exposure models and risk assessment.


Assuntos
Agricultura , Exposição Ambiental/análise , Praguicidas/análise , Praguicidas/urina , Poluição do Ar/análise , Poluição do Ar em Ambientes Fechados/análise , California , Pré-Escolar , Vestuário , Poeira/análise , Exposição Ambiental/efeitos adversos , Monitoramento Ambiental , Poluentes Ambientais/análise , Poluentes Ambientais/intoxicação , Família , Feminino , Contaminação de Alimentos/análise , Habitação , Humanos , Lactente , Masculino , Intoxicação por Organofosfatos , Compostos Organofosforados/análise , Compostos Organofosforados/urina , Resíduos de Praguicidas/análise , Praguicidas/intoxicação , Piretrinas/análise , Piretrinas/intoxicação , Piretrinas/urina , Medição de Risco/métodos
5.
Analyst ; 127(7): 921-9, 2002 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12173651

RESUMO

A variety of extraction procedures were evaluated for the extraction of arsenic and other analytes from lobster tissue samples using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) detection. Soxhlet, room temperature mixing, sonication, microwave assisted, supercritical carbon dioxide and subcritical water extractions were evaluated for a variety of solvent systems and optimum conditions determined using a partially defatted Lobster Hepatopancreas marine certified reference material, TORT-2 (National Research Council of Canada). The solubility trends and solvents into which the analytes extracted gave an indication as to the polar/non-polar nature of the compounds present. Analytes that prefer water are probably more polar or inorganic, while those preferring methanol solutions are less polar or organic in nature. Arsenic, cadmium, cobalt, molybdenum and selenium were probably all present in TORT-2 in both polar inorganic and non-polar organic forms. While TORT-2 may have contained similar amounts of selenium in both forms, the results suggested that more of the arsenic was present as less polar or more organic compounds, and cobalt existed mainly as more polar or inorganic species. Most of the extraction techniques suggested that, although there may be some less polar organic forms present, more of the cadmium was probably present as polar inorganic compounds. Additionally, most techniques indicated that molybdenum was possibly all less polar or more organic in nature. In general, microwave assisted extraction (MAE) yielded comparable or improved recoveries for all of the analytes monitored and usually required less solvent. Additionally, MAE proved to be the mildest, fastest, least complicated and most reproducible extraction technique evaluated. MAE at 75 degrees C for 2 min exposure time yielded quantitative recovery of arsenic from TORT-2. These conditions were evaluated for lobster tissue samples purchased from a local restaurant. Separate evaluation of the lobster meat and organs resulted in quantitative recoveries of arsenic from both tissue samples. The results indicated that the extraction efficiencies might have some dependence upon the extraction technique, extraction conditions, analyte, solvent, and sample matrix.


Assuntos
Arsênio/análise , Nephropidae/química , Frutos do Mar/análise , Animais , Cádmio/análise , Cobalto/análise , Espectrometria de Massas/métodos , Micro-Ondas , Molibdênio/análise , Selênio/análise
6.
Talanta ; 58(1): 133-45, 2002 Aug 16.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18968740

RESUMO

A gradient anion exchange chromatographic technique was developed for the separation of arsenobetaine (AsB), arsenocholine (AsC), arsenite (As(III)), arsenate (As(V)), monomethylarsonic acid (MMAA) and dimethylarsinic acid (DMAA) in one chromatographic run. This technique used low residue ammonium carbonate buffer and the inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) chromatograms showed little baseline drift. Gradient elution improved peak shape and peak separation. The separation was completed in approximately 27 min with low detection limits (0.017-0.029 mug As kg(-1)). Baseline resolution of all the arsenic species evaluated was achieved when the concentration of AsC was less than approximately 12.5 mug As kg(-1). This technique was successfully applied to different extracts of a standard reference material, TORT-2, and lobster tissue. AsB was found to be the major arsenic species present. AsC, DMAA, MMAA and As(V) were also found, although MMAA was not detected in all of the TORT-2 extracts. Two unknown peaks found may be due to the presence of arsenosugars or other arsenic species. Discrepancy between extraction recoveries previously determined using flow injection-ICP-MS and the high-performance liquid chromatography-ICP-MS was observed in some cases. The differences may be due to the extraction technique and/or conditions at which the extractions were performed.

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