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1.
Anal Methods ; 15(45): 6294-6301, 2023 11 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37942813

ABSTRACT

An analytical method with broad applicability based on cold vapor generation high-resolution continuum source quartz tube atomic absorption spectrometry was developed and evaluated for the determination of total mercury in matrices with various complexities and compositions. Sample preparation for different matrices of food, environmental samples and (bio)polymeric materials and unified operating conditions for derivatization and measurement were evaluated. The method was validated according to established requirements (Eurachem Guide 2014, EC Decisions 657/2002; 333/2007; 836/2011 and Association of Official Analytical Chemists Guide - AOAC). Analytical versatility was checked on various samples of fish fillets, mushrooms, soil, water and water sediment, sludge from a wastewater treatment unit, and (bio)polymeric materials from waste recycled from food packaging, computers and garden tools. Under optimal conditions for cold vapor generation in a batch system, namely 3% (v/v) HCl as reaction medium for 5 mL aliquot samples and a volume of 3.5 mL 0.3% (m/v) NaBH4 stabilized in 0.2% (m/v) NaOH as derivatization reagent, the detection limit for Hg in terms of peak height measurement (n = 7 days) was in the range 0.064 ± 0.004 µg L-1 in water, 0.014 ± 0.001 mg kg-1 in environmental samples and 0.009 ± 0.001 mg kg-1 in (bio)polymeric materials. Overall recovery of Hg by analysis of certified reference materials was 102 ± 20% (k = 2) in food, soil, wastewater and water sediment, and polyethylene. Precision for the measurement of various real samples ranged between 4.2 and 15.0%. A performance study highlighted that the method was sensitive, free of non-spectral interference coming from the multielemental matrix and that it complied with the requirements for Hg determination set in EC Decisions and AOAC Guidelines at least for the more common matrices analyzed for social impact.


Subject(s)
Mercury , Animals , Mercury/analysis , Mercury/chemistry , Quartz , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Gases/analysis , Water , Soil
2.
Talanta ; 259: 124551, 2023 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37075518

ABSTRACT

This study presents for the first time the coupling between in-situ Diffusive Gradient in Thin-film (DGT) passive sampling technique and ex-situ small-sized instrumentation based on electrothermal vaporization capacitively coupled plasma microtorch optical emission spectrometry (SSETV-µCCP-OES) for the simultaneous determination of Cd, Pb, Cu, Zn and Hg in surface water. Unique features of the DGT-SSETV-µCCP-OES are low power and low Ar consumption for plasma generation (15 W, 150 mL min-1) and significant improvement of the detection limits following DGT passive sampling. The new method was validated in terms of river water analysis in comparison with graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry and thermal decomposition atomic absorption spectrometry. Combining the abilities of preconcentration by in-situ Chelex-DGT passive sampling with plasma microtorch equipped with a low resolution microspectrometer provided multielemental simultaneous determination with detection limits of (µg L-1) 0.01 (Cd, Zn and Hg), 0.02 (Cu) and 0.07 (Pb) in water, at least one order of magnitude better than using grab sampling without preconcentration. It was possible the quantification of labile fraction of priority hazardous metals (Cd, Pb) in river water below the instrumental limits of detection (µg L-1) of 0.12 and 0.80 obtained in SSETV-µCCP-OES without DGT sampling. The precision of the method was in the range 15.3-22.4% (combined uncertainty), while the accuracy was 95-103% and trueness of 27-33% (expanded uncertainty, k = 2). The DGT-SSETV-µCCP-OES coupling proved to be an ideal and powerful tool for surface water analysis in compliance with green and white analytical chemistry concepts. The application of the RGB-12 algorithm provided very good red/green (AGREEprep)/blue/white scores (%) of 100/80/98/93, determined primarily by in-situ DGT passive sampling, very good detection limits and cost-effective SSETV-µCCP-OES instrumentation.

3.
Anal Methods ; 15(13): 1734-1746, 2023 03 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36939005

ABSTRACT

A unified analytical method applicable to common foodstuff matrices was developed and characterized for total and inorganic arsenic determination by hydride generation high-resolution continuum source quartz tube atomic absorption spectrometry, which was established based on different sample preparation procedures. This new method was found to be interference-free and cost-effective in terms of reagents consumption for sample preparation and derivatization to arsine for the inorganic arsenic fraction. Microwave-assisted digestion in HNO3-H2O2 for total arsenic and extraction in 0.28 mol L-1 HNO3 by mechanical stirring in a water bath or ultrasound-assisted extraction in 0.01 mol L-1 HCl without separation of inorganic As, all coupled with arsine generation in 0.01 mol L-1 HCl medium with 0.6% NaBH4 in 0.01% NaOH in the presence of 0.2% L-cysteine was found to be suitable for all matrices. The results were statistically compared by applying Tukey's and Dunnett's multiple comparison methods (p > 0.05). The use of external calibration with As(III) standards and standard addition method for quantification showed the lack of non-spectral interferences from the multimineral matrices, resulting in a reliable method for total/inorganic As determination in various foodstuffs. The limits of detection for total/inorganic As using peak height measurement were 0.0044 ± 0.0005/0.0022 ± 0.0003 mg kg-1 (n = 25 days). The overall recovery for total/inorganic As in the certified reference materials was in the range of 98% ± 22%, and 99% ± 24% (k = 2). The extraction of inorganic As in 0.01 mol L-1 HCl and 0.28 mol L-1 HNO3 provided the recovery of 106% ± 25% and 100% ± 25% (k = 2), which was better than in 10 mol L-1 HCl. The precision of measurements in real samples of fish muscle, meat and organs, rice and rice-based baby foods with contents of 0.052-5.29 mg kg-1 total As and 0.005-0.063 mg kg-1 inorganic As was 9.8-18.8% and 8.7-32.0%, respectively, which was calculated based on the combined uncertainty.


Subject(s)
Arsenic , Animals , Arsenic/analysis , Quartz , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Hydrogen Peroxide
4.
Molecules ; 26(9)2021 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33946509

ABSTRACT

The simultaneous determination of chemical vapor-generating elements involving derivatization is difficult even by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry or mass spectrometry. This study proposes a new direct liquid microsampling method for the simultaneous determination of As, Bi, Se, Te, Hg, Pb, and Sn, using a fully miniaturized set-up based on electrothermal vaporization capacitively coupled plasma microtorch optical emission spectrometry. The method is cost-effective, free from non-spectral interference, and easy to run by avoiding derivatization. The method involves the vaporization of analytes from the 10 µL sample and recording of episodic spectra generated in low-power (15 W) and low-Ar consumption (150 mL min-1) plasma microtorch interfaced with low-resolution microspectrometers. Selective vaporization at 1300 °C ensured the avoidance of non-spectral effects and allowed the use of external calibration. Several spectral lines for each element even in the range 180-210 nm could be selected. Generally, this spectral range is examined with large-scale instrumentation. Even in the absence of derivatization, the obtained detection limits were low (0.02-0.75 mg kg-1) and allowed analysis of environmental samples, such as cave and river sediments. The recovery was in the range of 86-116%, and the accuracy was better than 10%. The method is of general interest and could be implemented on any miniaturized or classical laboratory spectrometric instrumentation.

5.
Talanta ; 217: 121067, 2020 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32498880

ABSTRACT

An analytical method for the quantification of total Hg and CH3Hg+ in biological tissues (fish, mushroom) and water sediment was developed based on small-sized electrothermal vaporization capacitively coupled plasma microtorch optical emission spectrometry using a low-resolution microspectrometer as detector. Sample preparation was carried out according to the procedure recommended by JRC Technical Report of European Commission for the determination of CH3Hg+ in seafood and adapted by us for lower consumption of reagents. Amounts of 0.1 - 0.5 g sample were subjected to extraction in 5 ml of 47% HBr then CH3Hg+ was extracted in 2 × 1 ml toluene and back-extracted in 2 ml aqueous solution of 1% l-cysteine. Total Hg/CH3Hg+ were quantified in 10 µl of acidic extract/l-cysteine solution after electrothermal vaporization and measurement of 253.652 nm Hg signal in the episodic emission spectra. Under the optimal working conditions of system (70 °C sample drying, 1300 °C sample vaporization, 10 W plasma power and 150 ml min-1 Ar flow) the limits of detection were 7.0 µg kg-1 total Hg and 3.5 µg kg-1 CH3Hg+. Comparison of slopes in external calibration and standard addition procedure revealed the lack of non-spectral interferences of multimineral matrix, so that the calibration against Hg2+ standards was adopted. Pooled recovery of total mercury/methylmercury was 101 ± 7%/100 ± 7%, while precision assessed from measurements of real samples was in the range 1.6-9.6%/2.7-12.8%. The proposed method validated according to Eurachem Guide 2014 is selective and complies with demands in European legislation (Decisions 657/2002; 333/2007; 836/2011) and Association of Official Analytical Chemists Guide in terms of performances for food control. The method displays a high degree of greenness by circumventing cold vapor generation, use of small amounts of reagents and full-miniaturized instrumentation resulting in low analytical costs without reducing results quality. Besides, the method is simple and rapid, since it uses external calibration curves prepared from Hg2+standard solutions both for total Hg and CH3Hg+ determination.

6.
Talanta ; 170: 464-472, 2017 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28501197

ABSTRACT

A non-chromatographic method based on double liquid-liquid extraction and measurements by UV photochemical vapor generation capacitively coupled plasma microtorch optical emission spectrometry was developed and characterized for methylmercury determination in seafood. Samples were prepared following the procedure recommended in JRC Technical Report of European Commission formerly proposed for the determination of methylmercury in seafood by thermal decomposition atomic absorption spectrometry, namely confinement of Hg species in 47% HBr solution, extraction of CH3Hg+ in toluene and back-extraction in 1% l-cysteine aqueous solution. Mercury cold vapor was generated by flow injection UV photo-reduction from CH3Hg+ in 0.6molL-1 HCOOH, while quantification was performed against external Hg2+ aqueous standards and measuring Hg 253.652nm emission using a low power/Ar consumption plasma microtorch (15W, 100mLmin-1) and a low resolution microspectrometer (Ocean Optics). The figures of merit and analytical capability were assessed by analyzing certified reference materials and test samples of fish fillet and discussed in relation with requirements for Hg determination in seafood in European legislation (Decisions 2007/333/EC and 2002/657/EC) as well as compared to performances achieved in thermal decomposition atomic absorption spectrometry. The limit of detection and quantification of 2µgkg-1 and 6µgkg-1 respectively, precision of 2.7-9.4% and accuracy of 99±8% of the proposed method for the determination of CH3Hg+ fulfill the demands of European legislation for Hg quantification. The limit of detection and quantification were better than those in the used reference method or other non-/chromatographic methods taken for comparison. The analysis of certified reference materials and the Bland and Altman test performed on 12 test samples confirmed trueness of the proposed method and its reliability for the determination of traces of CH3Hg+ with 95% confidence level. The proposed method fulfills several demands of the eco-scale concept, is sensitive, simple and safe related to sample preparation through elimination of classical, harmful reductants and attractive by using economical miniaturized instrumentation incorporating a low power and low Ar consumption plasma.


Subject(s)
Food Analysis/methods , Methylmercury Compounds/analysis , Seafood/analysis , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Animals , Equipment Design , Fishes , Food Analysis/instrumentation , Limit of Detection , Reproducibility of Results , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/instrumentation
7.
Chemosphere ; 172: 127-137, 2017 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28063315

ABSTRACT

The study proposes a combined model based on diagrams (Gibbs, Piper, Stuyfzand Hydrogeochemical Classification System) and unsupervised statistical approaches (Cluster Analysis, Principal Component Analysis, Fuzzy Principal Component Analysis, Fuzzy Hierarchical Cross-Clustering) to describe natural enrichment of inorganic arsenic and co-occurring species in groundwater in the Banat Plain, southwestern Romania. Speciation of inorganic As (arsenite, arsenate), ion concentrations (Na+, K+, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-, Cl-, F-, SO42-, PO43-, NO3-), pH, redox potential, conductivity and total dissolved substances were performed. Classical diagrams provided the hydrochemical characterization, while statistical approaches were helpful to establish (i) the mechanism of naturally occurring of As and F- species and the anthropogenic one for NO3-, SO42-, PO43- and K+ and (ii) classification of groundwater based on content of arsenic species. The HCO3- type of local groundwater and alkaline pH (8.31-8.49) were found to be responsible for the enrichment of arsenic species and occurrence of F- but by different paths. The PO43--AsO43- ion exchange, water-rock interaction (silicates hydrolysis and desorption from clay) were associated to arsenate enrichment in the oxidizing aquifer. Fuzzy Hierarchical Cross-Clustering was the strongest tool for the rapid simultaneous classification of groundwaters as a function of arsenic content and hydrogeochemical characteristics. The approach indicated the Na+-F--pH cluster as marker for groundwater with naturally elevated As and highlighted which parameters need to be monitored. A chemical conceptual model illustrating the natural and anthropogenic paths and enrichment of As and co-occurring species in the local groundwater supported by mineralogical analysis of rocks was established.


Subject(s)
Arsenic/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Groundwater/chemistry , Models, Chemical , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Environmental Monitoring/statistics & numerical data , Multivariate Analysis , Romania
8.
Chemosphere ; 138: 96-103, 2015 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26057390

ABSTRACT

An associative simultaneous fuzzy divisive hierarchical algorithm was used to predict the fate of Hg and other contaminants in soil around a former chlor-alkali plant. The algorithm was applied on several natural and anthropogenic characteristics of soil including water leachable, mobile, semi-mobile, non-mobile fractions and total Hg, Al, Ba, Ca, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Li, Mg, Mn, Na, Sr, Zn, water leachable fraction of Cl(-), NO3(-) and SO4(2)(-), pH and total organic carbon. The cross-classification algorithm provided a divisive fuzzy partition of the soil samples and associated characteristics. Soils outside the perimeter of the former chlor-alkali plant were clustered based on the natural characteristics and total Hg. In contaminated zones Hg speciation becomes relevant and the assessment of species distribution is necessary. The descending order of concentration of Hg species in the test site was semi-mobile>mobile>non-mobile>water-leachable. Physico-chemical features responsible for similarities or differences between uncontaminated soil samples or contaminated with Hg, Cu, Zn, Ba and NO3(-) were also highlighted. Other characteristics of the contaminated soil were found to be Ca, sulfate, Na and chloride, some of which with influence on Hg fate. The presence of Ca and sulfate in soil induced a higher water leachability of Hg, while Cu had an opposite effect by forming amalgam. The used algorithm provided an in-deep understanding of processes involving Hg species and allowed to make prediction of the fate of Hg and contaminants linked to chlor-alkali-industry.


Subject(s)
Chemical Industry , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Mercury/analysis , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Soil/chemistry , Algorithms , Alkalies , Chlorine , Cluster Analysis , Fuzzy Logic , Romania
9.
Talanta ; 129: 72-8, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25127566

ABSTRACT

A low power and low argon consumption (13.56 MHz, 15 W, 150 ml min(-1)) capacitively coupled plasma microtorch interfaced with a low-resolution microspectrometer and a small-sized electrothermal vaporization Rh coiled-filament as liquid microsample introduction device into the plasma was investigated for the simultaneous determination of several volatile elements of interest for environment. Constructive details, spectral and analytical characteristics, and optimum operating conditions of the laboratory equipment for the simultaneous determination of Ag, Cd, Cu, Pb and Zn requiring low vaporization power are provided. The method involves drying of 10 µl sample at 100°C, vaporization at 1500°C and emission measurement by capture of 20 successive spectral episodes each at an integration time of 500 ms. Experiments showed that emission of elements and plasma background were disturbed by the presence of complex matrix and hot Ar flow transporting the microsample into plasma. The emission spectrum of elements is simple, dominated by the resonance lines. The analytical system provided detection limits in the ng ml(-1) range: 0.5(Ag); 1.5(Cd); 5.6(Cu); 20(Pb) and 3(Zn) and absolute detection limits of the order of pg: 5(Ag); 15(Cd); 56(Cu); 200(Pb) and 30(Zn). It was demonstrated the utility and capability of the miniaturized analytical system in the simultaneous determination of elements in soil and water sediment using the standard addition method to compensate for the non-spectral effects of alkali and earth alkaline elements. The analysis of eight certified reference materials exhibited reliable results with recovery in the range of 95-108% and precision of 0.5-9.0% for the five examined elements. The proposed miniaturized analytical system is attractive due to the simple construction of the electrothermal vaporization device and microtorch, low costs associated to plasma generation, high analytical sensitivity and easy-to-run for simultaneous multielemental analysis of liquid microsamples.


Subject(s)
Electrochemistry/methods , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Trace Elements/analysis , Cadmium/analysis , Copper/analysis , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Lead/analysis , Limit of Detection , Optics and Photonics , Reproducibility of Results , Silver/analysis , Soil Pollutants/analysis , Temperature , Volatilization , Zinc/analysis
10.
Chem Cent J ; 7(1): 178, 2013 Nov 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24252185

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The paper presents the evaluation of soil contamination with total, water-available, mobile, semi-mobile and non-mobile Hg fractions in the surroundings of a former chlor-alkali plant in connection with several chemical soil characteristics. Principal Component Analysis and Cluster Analysis were used to evaluate the chemical composition variability of soil and factors influencing the fate of Hg in such areas. The sequential extraction EPA 3200-Method and the determination technique based on capacitively coupled microplasma optical emission spectrometry were checked. RESULTS: A case study was conducted in the Turda town, Romania. The results revealed a high contamination with Hg in the area of the former chlor-alkali plant and waste landfills, where soils were categorized as hazardous waste. The weight of the Hg fractions decreased in the order semi-mobile > non-mobile > mobile > water leachable. Principal Component Analysis revealed 7 factors describing chemical composition variability of soil, of which 3 attributed to Hg species. Total Hg, semi-mobile, non-mobile and mobile fractions were observed to have a strong influence, while the water leachable fraction a weak influence. The two-dimensional plot of PCs highlighted 3 groups of sites according to the Hg contamination factor. The statistical approach has shown that the Hg fate in soil is dependent on pH, content of organic matter, Ca, Fe, Mn, Cu and SO42- rather than natural components, such as aluminosilicates. Cluster analysis of soil characteristics revealed 3 clusters, one of which including Hg species. Soil contamination with Cu as sulfate and Zn as nitrate was also observed. CONCLUSIONS: The approach based on speciation and statistical interpretation of data developed in this study could be useful in the investigation of other chlor-alkali contaminated areas. According to the Bland and Altman test the 3-step sequential extraction scheme is suitable for Hg speciation in soil, while the used determination method of Hg is appropriate.

11.
Food Chem ; 141(4): 3621-6, 2013 Dec 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23993529

ABSTRACT

A method for Li determination in drinking water using atomic emission spectrometry in a new low-power Ar capacitively coupled plasma microtorch (15 W, 0.6 L min(-1)) with a detection limit of 0.013 µg L(-1) was developed. The method is based on external calibration in the presence of a buffering solution containing 5 mg L(-1) Na, K, Ca, Mg added both to calibration standards and water samples. The statistical validation on 31 bottled drinking water samples (0.4-2140 µg L(-1) Li) using the Bland and Altman test and regression analysis has shown results similar to those obtained by the standard additions method. The buffering solution approach is simpler than the standard additions and has demonstrated good intra- and interday precision, accuracy and robustness. It was successfully applied over a wide concentration range of Li and multimineral matrix with a pooled precision of 2.5-3.5% and 99±9% accuracy.


Subject(s)
Drinking Water/analysis , Lithium/analysis , Microspectrophotometry/methods , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Limit of Detection , Microspectrophotometry/instrumentation , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/instrumentation
12.
Talanta ; 109: 84-90, 2013 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23618143

ABSTRACT

A sensitive method using a miniature analytical system with a capacitively coupled plasma microtorch (25 W, 13.56 MHz, 0.4 l min(-1) Ar) was developed and evaluated for the determination of As and Sb in recyclable plastics and biodegradable materials by hydride generation optical emission spectrometry. Given their toxicity, As and Sb should be subject to monitoring in such materials despite not being included within the scope of Restriction of Hazardous Substances Directive. The advantages of the proposed approach are better detection limits and lower analysis cost relative to conventional systems based on inductively coupled plasma optical emission and flame atomic absorption spectrometry with/without derivatization. Samples were subjected to acidic microwave-assisted digestion in a nitric-sulfuric acid mixture. Chemical hydride generation with 0.5% NaBH4 after the prereduction of As(V) and Sb(V) with 0.3% L-cysteine in 0.01 mol l(-1) HCl (10 min contact time at 90±5°C) was used. Under the optimal hydride generation conditions and analytical system operation the detection limits (mg kg(-1)) were 0.5 (As) and 0.1 (Sb), whereas the precision was 0.4-7.1% for 10.2-46.2 mg kg(-1) As and 0.4-3.2% for 7.1-156 mg kg(-1) Sb. Analysis of two polyethylene CRMs revealed recoveries of 101±2% As and 100±1% Sb.


Subject(s)
Antimony/analysis , Arsenic/analysis , Polyethylenes/chemistry , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Biodegradation, Environmental , Equipment Design , Limit of Detection , Recycling , Reproducibility of Results , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/instrumentation
13.
Chem Cent J ; 7(1): 43, 2013 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23452327

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The aim of this paper was the validation of a new analytical method based on the high-resolution continuum source flame atomic absorption spectrometry for the fast-sequential determination of several hazardous/priority hazardous metals (Ag, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn) in soil after microwave assisted digestion in aqua regia. Determinations were performed on the ContrAA 300 (Analytik Jena) air-acetylene flame spectrometer equipped with xenon short-arc lamp as a continuum radiation source for all elements, double monochromator consisting of a prism pre-monocromator and an echelle grating monochromator, and charge coupled device as detector. For validation a method-performance study was conducted involving the establishment of the analytical performance of the new method (limits of detection and quantification, precision and accuracy). Moreover, the Bland and Altman statistical method was used in analyzing the agreement between the proposed assay and inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry as standardized method for the multielemental determination in soil. RESULTS: The limits of detection in soil sample (3σ criterion) in the high-resolution continuum source flame atomic absorption spectrometry method were (mg/kg): 0.18 (Ag), 0.14 (Cd), 0.36 (Co), 0.25 (Cr), 0.09 (Cu), 1.0 (Ni), 1.4 (Pb) and 0.18 (Zn), close to those in inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry: 0.12 (Ag), 0.05 (Cd), 0.15 (Co), 1.4 (Cr), 0.15 (Cu), 2.5 (Ni), 2.5 (Pb) and 0.04 (Zn). Accuracy was checked by analyzing 4 certified reference materials and a good agreement for 95% confidence interval was found in both methods, with recoveries in the range of 94-106% in atomic absorption and 97-103% in optical emission. Repeatability found by analyzing real soil samples was in the range 1.6-5.2% in atomic absorption, similar with that of 1.9-6.1% in optical emission spectrometry. The Bland and Altman method showed no statistical significant difference between the two spectrometric methods for 95% confidence interval. CONCLUSIONS: High-resolution continuum source flame atomic absorption spectrometry can be successfully used for the rapid, multielemental determination of hazardous/priority hazardous metals in soil with similar analytical performances to those in inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry.

14.
Chem Cent J ; 7(1): 5, 2013 Jan 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23311708

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The objective of this study was to examine the potential environmental risk of tailings resulted after precious and base metal ores processing, stored in seven impoundments located in the Aries river basin, Romania. The tailings were characterized by mineralogical and elemental composition, contamination indices, acid rock drainage generation potential and water leachability of hazardous/priority hazardous metals and ions. Multivariate statistical methods were used for data interpretation. RESULTS: Tailings were found to be highly contaminated with several hazardous/priority hazardous metals (As, Cu, Cd, Pb), and pose potential contamination risk for soil, sediments, surface and groundwater. Two out of the seven studied impoundments does not satisfy the criteria required for inert wastes, shows acid rock drainage potential and thus can contaminate the surface and groundwater. Three impoundments were found to be highly contaminated with As, Pb and Cd, two with As and other two with Cu. The tailings impoundments were grouped based on the enrichment factor, geoaccumulation index, contamination factor and contamination degree of 7 hazardous/priority hazardous metals (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb, Zn) considered typical for the studied tailings. Principal component analysis showed that 47% of the elemental variability was attributable to alkaline silicate rocks, 31% to acidic S-containing minerals, 12% to carbonate minerals and 5% to biogenic elements. Leachability of metals and ions was ascribed in proportion of 61% to silicates, 11% to acidic minerals and 6% to the organic matter. A variability of 18% was attributed to leachability of biogenic elements (Na, K, Cl-, NO3-) with no potential environmental risk. Pattern recognition by agglomerative hierarchical clustering emphasized the grouping of impoundments in agreement with their contamination degree and acid rock drainage generation potential. CONCLUSIONS: Tailings stored in the studied impoundments were found to be contaminated with some hazardous/ priority hazardous metals, fluoride and sulphate and thus presents different contamination risk for the environment. A long term monitoring program of these tailings impoundments and the expansion of the ecologization measures in the area is required.

15.
Food Chem ; 134(4): 2447-52, 2012 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23442709

ABSTRACT

A method for multielemental (Ca, Cr, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na, P and Zn) determination in multimineral/multivitamins by atomic emission spectrometry in a medium power radiofrequency capacitively coupled plasma (275 W) and low Ar consumption (0.4 L min(-1)) is proposed. Determinations were performed on commercially available tablets and a standard reference material after acidic high-pressure microwave assisted digestion and using the standard additions procedure. The detection limits (mg g(-1)) were in the range 0.003 (Na)-1.5 (P) and were not depreciated by the non-spectral interference of mineral matrices of K, Ca, Mg and Na excepting Zn and P. Found concentrations corresponded generally to the labelled contents with recovery in the range of 90-107% and 1.0-13.0% repeatability. The proposed technique could be an advantageous alternative to the more expensive inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry in the quality control of multimineral/multivitamin preparations.


Subject(s)
Minerals/analysis , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/methods , Vitamins/analysis , Limit of Detection , Quality Control , Spectrophotometry, Atomic/instrumentation
16.
Acta Chim Slov ; 59(2): 359-65, 2012 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24061253

ABSTRACT

A medium power, low Ar consumption capacitively coupled plasma torch (275 W, 0.4 L min-1) with molybdenum tubular electrode and single or two ring electrodes in non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) was characterized with respect to its ability to achieve element ionization. Ionization degrees of Ca, Mg, Mn and Cd were determined from ionic-to-atomic emission ratio and ionization equilibrium according to Saha's equation. The ionization degrees resulted from the Saha equation were higher by 9-32% than those obtained from spectral lines intensity in LTE regime and closer to reality. A linear decrease of ionization with increase of ionization energy of elements was observed. Plasma torch with two ring electrodes provided higher ionization degrees (85 ± 7% Ca, 79 ± 7% Mn, 80 ± 7% Mg and 73 ± 8% Cd) than those in single ring arrangement (70 ± 6% Ca, 57 ± 7% Mn, 57 ± 8% Mg and 42 ± 9% Cd). The Ca ionization decreased linearly by up to 79 ± 4% and 53 ± 6% in plasma with two ring electrodes and single ring respectively in the presence of up to 400 µg mL-1 Na as interferent. The studied plasma was effective in element ionization and could be a potential ion source in mass spectrometry.

17.
J Hazard Mater ; 193: 65-9, 2011 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21802847

ABSTRACT

A new analytical system consisting of a low power capacitively coupled plasma microtorch (20 W, 13.56 MHz, 150 ml min(-1) Ar) and a microspectrometer was investigated for the Hg determination in non- and biodegradable materials by cold-vapor generation, using SnCl(2) reductant, and atomic emission spectrometry. The investigated miniaturized system was used for Hg determination in recyclable plastics from electronic equipments and biodegradable materials (shopping bags of 98% biodegradable polyethylene and corn starch) with the advantages of easy operation and low analysis costs. Samples were mineralized in HNO(3)-H(2)SO(4) mixture in a high-pressure microwave system. The detection limits of 0.05 ng ml(-1) or 0.08 µg g(-1) in solid sample were compared with those reported for other analytical systems. The method precision was 1.5-9.4% for Hg levels of 1.37-13.9 mg kg(-1), while recovery in two polyethylene certified reference materials in the range 98.7 ± 4.5% (95% confidence level).


Subject(s)
Biocompatible Materials , Mercury/analysis , Spectrum Analysis/methods , Miniaturization
18.
Roum Arch Microbiol Immunol ; 70(4): 178-85, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22568266

ABSTRACT

Last consensus in celiac disease in 2008 conducted under the aegis of the European Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition jointly with North American Society of Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition reveals the following: "celiac disease is a chronic immune-mediated enteropathy characterized by sensitization to gluten. That can affect any organ or system, with a wide range of clinical manifestations of variable severity". Thus, in recent years, clinical picture of celiac disease has changed the old paradigm--bowel disease with villous atrophy and malnutrition, being replaced with the new paradigm--multi-organ autoimmune disease, affecting many organs and systems throughout but with more less specific symptoms, which undiagnosed leads to delayed diagnosis, at a late-onset disease and long-term major complications as the risk of cancer. According to this consensus "the serological diagnosis of celiac disease is based on high sensitivity and specificity tests", but in line with changing clinical features of celiac disease, its diagnosis has undergone significant changes in recent years. These changes in the diagnosis of celiac disease, we have decided to analyze them.


Subject(s)
Celiac Disease/diagnosis , Celiac Disease/etiology , Celiac Disease/immunology , Celiac Disease/metabolism , Dermatitis Herpetiformis/diagnosis , Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1/complications , Histocompatibility Testing , Humans , Romania , Serologic Tests
19.
Acta Chim Slov ; 57(1): 173-81, 2010 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24061670

ABSTRACT

Non-spectral interference of easily ionized elements (EIEs) as chlorides and Al as AlCl3 and Al(NO3)3 on the emission of Ca II 393.367 nm, Ca I 422.673 nm, CaOH 554 nm and 622 nm were studied in a medium power radiofrequency capacitively coupled Ar plasma (275 W, 27.12 MHz) with single (SRTrfCCP) and double ring electrode (DRTrfCCP). The mechanisms of interferences were explained based on the matrix energy demand (MED) supposing the local thermal equilibrium (LTE) in plasma, emphasizing also processes contrasting with this model. Matrix effects were found to be dependent on the coupling geometry of the rf power to the torch, observation height, emitting Ca species and EIEs matrix nature but independent from Al as regards its salt origin. The magnitude of the matrix effects was correlated with the electron number density and the discharge temperature. The optimization of the observation height and use of the DRT geometry allowed the reduction of EIEs and Al matrix effects on the emission of Ca species compared to SRT. The best Ca detection limits in SRTrfCCP were at CaOH 622 nm (106-450 ng ml-1), while in DRTrfCCP at Ca I 422.673 nm (92-145 ng ml-1).

20.
Talanta ; 76(5): 1170-6, 2008 Sep 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18761173

ABSTRACT

The single ring electrode radiofrequency capacitively coupled plasma torch (SRTr.f.CCP) operated at 275W, 27.12 MHz and Ar flow rate below 0.7 lmin(-1) was investigated for the first time as atomization cell in atomic fluorescence spectrometry (AFS) using electrodeless discharge lamps (EDL) as primary radiation source and charged coupled devices as detector. The signal to background ratio (SBR) and limit of detection for Cd determination by EDL-SRTr.f.CCP-AFS were compared to those obtained in atomic emission spectrometry using the same plasma torch. The detection limit in fluorescence was 4.3 ngml(-1) Cd compared to 65 ngml(-1) and 40 ngml(-1) reported in r.f.CCP-atomic emission (AES) equipped with single or double ring electrode. The lower detection limit in EDL-SRTr.f.CCP-AFS is due to a much better SBR in fluorescence. The limit of detection was also compared to those in atomic fluorescence with inductively coupled plasma (0.4 ngml(-1)), microwave plasma torch (0.25 ngml(-1)) and air-acetylene flame (8 ngml(-1)). The influence of light-scattering through the plasma and the secondary reflection of the primary radiation on the wall of the quartz tube on the analytical performance are discussed. The non-spectral matrix effects of Ca, Mg and easily ionized elements are much lower in EDL-SRTr.f.CCP-AFS compared to SRTr.f.CCP-AES. The new technique was applied in the determination of Cd in contaminated soils, industrial hazardous waste (0.4-370 mgkg(-1)) and water (113 microgl(-1)) with repeatability of 4-8% and reproducibility in the range of 5-12%, similar to those in ICP-AES. The results were checked by the analysis of a soil and water CRM with a recovery degree of 97+/-9% and 98+/-4%, for a confidence limit of 95%. The present EDL-SRTr.f.CCP-AFS is a promising technique for Cd determination in environmental samples.

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