Publication | Closed Access
Determination of total mercury by single-stage gold amalgamation with cold vapour atomic spectrometric detection
75
Citations
10
References
1993
Year
Environmental MonitoringEngineeringGold Trap OrientationChemistryMineral ProcessingSingle Gold TrapEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental Analytical ChemistryMercury BiogeochemistryAnalytical ChemistryTotal MercuryElemental CharacterizationChromatographyWater QualityIntercalibration Hair SamplesSingle-stage Gold AmalgamationMercury ChemistryEnvironmental EngineeringSpectroscopyNatural SciencesMass SpectrometryEnvironmental RemediationAtomic Fluorescence Spectroscopy
The two-stage gold amalgamation technique with elemental mercury vapour detection was compared with a technique employing a single gold trap. When peak area was measured, and special attention paid to the gold trap orientation, the one-stage amalgamation procedure provided the same precision, accuracy and detection limits as the benchmark two-stage technique (Fitzgerald and Gill, 1979). The overall analysis time, however, was reduced from about 10 to 2 min per sample. An absolute detection limit (2σ of trap blanks) of less than 1 pg of Hg0 was attained using an atomic fluorescence detector, while relative standard deviations of 2.8, 1.5 and 2.2% were obtained for 500, 1000 and 2000 pg of Hg, respectively. Recoveries of close to 100% with RSDs of <3% were obtained in the determination of certified reference materials, intercalibration hair samples and lakewater using this more rapid procedure.
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