Direct chemical vapour generation-flame atomization as interface of high performance liquid chromatography-atomic fluorescence spectrometry for speciation of mercury without using post-column digestion
Author(s) -
Yongguang Yin,
Zhenhua Wang,
Jinfeng Peng,
Jingfu Liu,
Bin He,
Guibin Jiang
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
journal of analytical atomic spectrometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.899
H-Index - 113
eISSN - 1364-5544
pISSN - 0267-9477
DOI - 10.1039/b907169e
Subject(s) - chemistry , mercury (programming language) , chromatography , detection limit , reagent , methylmercury , analytical chemistry (journal) , mass spectrometry , high performance liquid chromatography , gas chromatography , atomic spectroscopy , certified reference materials , cold vapour atomic fluorescence spectroscopy , environmental chemistry , spectroscopy , organic chemistry , computer science , programming language , physics , bioaccumulation , quantum mechanics
A high performance liquid chromatography-direct chemical vapour generation-flame atomization-atomic fluorescence spectrometry (HPLC-CVG-FA-AFS) system for speciation of methylmercury (MeHg+), inorganic mercury (Hg2+) and ethylmercury (EtHg+) without using post-column digestion is developed and characterized. In this novel system, organomercurial species separated by chromatography were transformed to their hydrides by KBH4, further atomized in the flame atomizer and detected by AFS. The conventionally used on-line UV or microwave digestion system was omitted, and no oxidation reagent was needed, which significantly simplified the instrumentation. Under the optimized conditions, the detection limits were 0.2, 0.4 and 0.4 µg L−1 (as Hg) for MeHg+, Hg2+, and EtHg+ (100 µL injection), which corresponds to absolute detection limits of 0.02, 0.04 and 0.04 ng (as Hg) for MeHg+, Hg2+, and EtHg+, respectively. The sensitivity of the developed method was comparable with the conventional high performance liquid chromatography-UV digestion-cold vapour generation-atomic fluorescence spectrometry (HPLC-UV-CVG-AFS) system. Validation with biological certified reference materials showed that the proposed method is simple and accurate for mercury speciation.
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