sodium-tetraethylborate has been researched along with potassium-hydroxide* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for sodium-tetraethylborate and potassium-hydroxide
Article | Year |
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Simultaneous determination of mercury speciation in biological materials by GC/CVAFS after ethylation and room-temperature precollection.
We developed a method for the simultaneous determination of monomethyl mercury (MMHg), inorganic mercury [Hg(II)], and total mercury (THg) in biological materials. A variety of biological materials can be digested in methanolic KOH solution. The MMHg and Hg(II) present are converted to volatile ethyl derivatives, methylethyl mercury and diethyl mercury, by an aqueous-phase ethylation reaction with sodium tetraethylborate. The ethyl derivatives are precollected onto a trapping column at room temperature, in case of disconnection with the separation/detection system, and then thermally desorbed into a packed isothermal gas chromatography (GC) column. Eluted organo-Hg compounds from the GC column are decomposed into Hg0, and detection is completed by cold vapor atomic fluorescence spectrometry (CVAFS). Pure standard solutions can be used for calibration. The sum of MMHg and Hg(II) obtained by this method equals the THg value obtained by digestion with HNO3 and H2SO4, reduction with SnCl2, and single-stage amalgamation/CVAFS for all biological materials studied. Absolute detection limits are 0.6 pg and 1.3 pg of Hg as MMHg and Hg(II), respectively, corresponding to 0.3 ng and 0.6 ng/g (wet) of sample. Topics: Animals; Body Fluids; Borates; Chromatography, Gas; Fishes; Hair; Humans; Hydrogen-Ion Concentration; Hydroxides; Mercury Compounds; Methanol; Methylmercury Compounds; Muscles; Potassium Compounds; Sensitivity and Specificity; Spectrometry, Fluorescence | 1994 |
Determination of methylmercury in fish samples using GC/AA and sodium tetraethylborate derivatization.
A simple technique is described for the rapid determination of methylmercury in fish tissue. Following simple dissolution in methanolic KOH solution, aqueous phase ethylation by derivatization with NaB(C2H5)4, cryogenic trapping on a packed chromatographic column, and GC separation, volatile mercury species are detected by atomic absorption spectrometry. Absolute detection limits are 4 pg of Hg for CH3Hg+ and 75 pg of Hg for labile Hg2+. Concentration detection limits for this optimized procedure are 4 ng of Hg for CH3Hg+ and 75 ng of Hg for labile Hg2+ per gram of pulverized dried fish tissue. Analysis of standard reference materials demonstrates the accuracy, precision, and reproducibility of the analytical method. Topics: Animals; Borates; Chromatography, Gas; Fishes; Hydroxides; Methanol; Methylmercury Compounds; Potassium; Potassium Compounds; Reference Standards; Reproducibility of Results; Spectrophotometry, Atomic | 1993 |