A simple, sensitive, and selective method for rapid determination of nitrite is described which is based on its catalytic effect in the reaction between thymol blue and bromate in acidic media. The reaction is monitored spectrophotometrically by measuring the decrease in absorbance at 543 nm by a fi
Flow-injection spectrophotometric determination of trace vanadium based on catalysis of the gallic acid bromate reaction
β Scribed by Tsutomu Fukasawa; Susumu Kawakubo; Akihiro Unno
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1986
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 417 KB
- Volume
- 183
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2670
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β¦ Synopsis
High sensitivity is obtained by using high concentrations of gallic acid and bromate, although the uncatalyzed reaction is significant. Various reactant concentrations, reaction temperature, pH and residence times can be used to alter the linear calibration ranges and sensitivity for vanadium. With reagent streams of 1.76 M bromate and 0.06 M gallic acid at pH 3.8 (each at 1 ml min-I), 0.2-20 ng of vanadium (20-~1 injections) can be determined at 30Β°C. Oxidized gallic acid is detected at 380 nm. When the bromate concentration is decreased to 0.5 M and the temperature is 6S"C, 0.05-4 ng of vanadium can be determined; the relative standard deviation is ca. 5% for 0.6 ng of vanadium. The tolerances for Al(III), Fe(III), Mo(V1) and iodide are 10 ng, 10 ng, 50 ng and 200 ng, respectively, for the determination of 1 ng of vanadium. About 12 samples can be injected per hour.
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