Issue 29, 2020

Total mercury bias in soil analysis by CV-AFS: causes, consequences and a simple solution based on sulfhydryl cotton fiber as a clean-up step

Abstract

This study examines the matrix effect over the trueness for determining total mercury (THg) using CV-AFS. We demonstrate that matrix interferences in soils and sediment samples cannot be eliminated by acid digestion and establish the use of sulfhydryl cotton fiber (SCF), a malleable, cheap and easy to synthesize fiber, as a mandatory solution capable to overcome this bias. Using the classic CV-AFS approach, an overestimation bias for THg recovery values of >140% in a certified reference material was reported. Interference metals test was conducted, thus discarding any influence of metals in the overestimation bias. Therefore, a clean-up step using SCF was proposed, and tests with synthesized fiber did not present a dispersion of >0.08 ng L−1. Moreover, validation was performed by analyzing three certified reference material and yielding mean recovery percentages of 100% ± 1%. A validated methodology was applied to ten environmental soil samples; THg values obtained varied from 129 to 384 ng g−1. Finally, a comparison between sample results obtained and reference method did not show any significant differences (p > 0.05), thus highlighting the efficacy of SCF–CV-AFS for THg quantification in environmental solid samples.

Graphical abstract: Total mercury bias in soil analysis by CV-AFS: causes, consequences and a simple solution based on sulfhydryl cotton fiber as a clean-up step

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Technical Note
Submitted
22 May 2020
Accepted
02 Jul 2020
First published
03 Jul 2020

Anal. Methods, 2020,12, 3756-3762

Total mercury bias in soil analysis by CV-AFS: causes, consequences and a simple solution based on sulfhydryl cotton fiber as a clean-up step

P. A. Pérez, M. A. Bravo and W. Quiroz, Anal. Methods, 2020, 12, 3756 DOI: 10.1039/D0AY01035A

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