Traceable values for nitrate in water samples by isotope dilution analysis using a small thermionic quadrupole mass spectrometer.
An isotope dilution mass spectrometric procedure was developed for the determination of nitrate in water samples. The isotope dilution experiments were carried out using the Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements's 15N-enriched nitrate spike reference material IRMM-627. Nitrate was isolated from the matrix by precipitating it as nitron nitrate, from which emission of negative thermal NO2-ions was found to be best. The ions were produced in the ion source of a small, low-cost, easy-to-handle thermionic quadrupole mass spectrometer equipped with a secondary electron multiplier coupled to an ion counter. The procedure developed was applied to the measurement of nitrate in a certified reference material (stimulated rainwater, CRM 409 from Community Bureau of Reference), in sparkling mineral water, and in tap water. Results were compared with those obtained using ion chromatography. Good agreement (within 1%) was found between the concentration determined by isotope dilution mass spectrometry, the values from ion chromatography, and the certified value. The procedure developed allowed accurate and traceable determinations of nitrate in water samples, with an expanded uncertainty (coverage factor k = 2) of 2-5%, and the detection limit was found to be 2 mumol kg-1.[1]References
- Traceable values for nitrate in water samples by isotope dilution analysis using a small thermionic quadrupole mass spectrometer. Wolff, J.C., Taylor, D.P., De Bièvre, P. Anal. Chem. (1996) [Pubmed]
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