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Atomic Spectroscopy

High Sensitivity Determination of Antimony with Application for the Characterization of Its Migration in Bottled Water by a Dielectric Barrier Discharge (DBD) Coupled with Hydride Generation – Atomic Fluorescence Spectrometry (HG-AFS)

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Pages 990-1004 | Received 31 Mar 2020, Accepted 28 Jun 2020, Published online: 07 Aug 2020
 

Abstract

An in situ dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) employed as a preconcentration device was coupled with hydride generation atomic fluorescence spectrometry (HG-AFS) for the determination of antimony (Sb) that migrated from plastic to bottle water. In the presence of oxygen under a 7.5 kV discharge, Sb was completely trapped on the surface of dielectric barrier discharge quartz tube. After 50 s of Ar carrier sweeping, water vapor interference was effectively eliminated and Sb was rapidly released by a discharge containing hydrogen using 6.8 kV. In addition, the investigation of Sb migration from bottle materials to water was carried out considering temperature and bottle materials. Under the optimized conditions, the detection of limit (LOD) was 9 pg or 5 pg/mL. The linearity of the calibration relationship R2 exceeded 0.996 for concentrations from of 0.05 to 50 μg/L. In addition, the determined Sb levels of water certified reference materials (CRMs) were in good agreement with the certified values. The spiked recoveries for bottled water samples were from 95% to 104% with 3% to 8% relative standard deviation values. In comparison, the HG-in situ DBD-AFS method is capable to increase the analytical sensitivity using the peak height by 7-fold compared to standard HG-AFS. DBD offers gas phase enrichment at room temperature with instrumental miniaturization for elemental analysis with low energy consumption, small size and low cost.

Additional information

Funding

This work was financially supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of China (grant number 2017YFD0801203), the Central Public-Interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund (grant number Y2019XK05/1610072018003/1610072019001), and the Agricultural Science and Technology Innovation Program of CAAS (grant number CAAS-ZDRW202011).

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