A homemade FIA device for mercury determination in water is presented, as well as the influence of different operation parameters. The method is based upon the mercury(II) ion reduction with SnCl 2 to elementary mercury, followed by the extraction of the latter from the liquid phase by means of an a
Determination of mercury in saliva with a flow-injection system
β Scribed by T. Guo; J. Baasner; M. Gradl; A. Kistner
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 454 KB
- Volume
- 320
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2670
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β¦ Synopsis
A simple, fast and reliable method, with a low detection limit, has been developed for the determination of total mercury in saliva samples. The method uses a brominating reagent, followed by on-line addition of KMnO, at room temperature to convert organically bound mercury to inorganic mercury ions, and determines mercury by flow-injection cold-vapour atomic absorption spectrometry. Using the method described, complete recoveries of five mercury compounds from saliva were attained. Results obtained on real samples using the new method were comparable to that obtained using the established method with batch system. The detection limit of this method, based on three standard deviations of the blank, is 0.05 pg 1-l Hg in a saliva sample of 500 ~1. A sample throughput of 80 measurements per hour is possible with the method. The calibration curves are linear up to 20 pg 1-l and the dynamic range extends to 40 pg 1-l Hg. At a concentration of 1 pg 1-l mercury in saliva, the relative standard deviation is about 2% for 11 replicates; a total volume of 0.5 ml saliva is required for three replicates.
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