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
Spectrophotometric determination of trace bromide by its catalytic effect on the tetrabase-chloramine T reaction
โ Scribed by Takashi Tomiyasu; Yoshiko Taga; Hayao Sakamoto; Norinobu Yonehara
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1996
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 460 KB
- Volume
- 319
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2670
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
A catalytic spectrophotometric method for the determination of trace amounts of bromide is proposed. In acidic solution 4,4'-bis(dimethylamino)diphenylmethane (tetrabase) is oxidized by chloramine T to form a blue compound, which is further oxidized to a greenish-yellow compound. The reaction is accelerated by trace amounts of bromide and can be followed by measuring the increase in the absorbance at 600 nm; the maximum absorbance is obtained on an absorbance-time curve at a given reaction time. Since the maximum value increases with increase in bromide concentration, this value is used as the measured parameter for the bromide determination. Under the optimum experimental conditions (4.1 X 10e6 M tetrabase, 3.8 X lop4 M chloramine T, pH 3.8, 2O"C), bromide can be determined in the range 2-100 pg 1-l. The relative standard deviations (n = 10) are 0.9, 1.7, 3.7% for 60, 20 and 10 pg 1-l bromide, respectively. This method was successfully applied to a determination of bromide in natural water samples.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The use of a gallocyanine-bromate oxidation system for the direct determination of vanadium (0.020-100 ng/ml) with spectrophotometric detection is described. The decrease in absorbance results from the oxidation of gallocyanine by bromate in the presence of vanadium as a catalyst. The effects of imp