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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Species-Specific GC/ICP-IDMS for Trimethyllead Determinations in Biological and Environmental Samples
Nataliya PoperechnaKlaus G. Heumannsubject
Detection limitchemistry.chemical_classificationChromatography GasChromatographyIodideIndicator Dilution TechniquesHalideDustFood ContaminationIsotope dilutionMass spectrometryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundCertified reference materialsIsotopesLeadSeafoodchemistryTetraethyl LeadEnvironmental PollutantsGas chromatographyDerivatizationdescription
An accurate and sensitive species-specific isotope dilution GC/ICPMS method was developed for the determination of trimethyllead (Me3Pb+) in biological and environmental samples. A trimethyllead spike was synthesized from 206Pb-enriched metallic lead by reaction of lead halide with methyllithium and subsequent formation of trimethyllead iodide. The isotopic composition of the spike solution was determined by GC/ICPMS after derivatization with tetraethylborate, and its concentration was determined by reverse isotope dilution analysis. The species-specific GC/ICP-IDMS method was validated by reference material CRM 605 (urban dust) certified for Me3Pb+. The method was also applied to determine the Me3Pb+ content in six biological reference materials (DORM 2, CRM 278, CRM 422, CRM 463, CRM 477, MURST-ISS-A2) and one sediment reference material (CRM 580) for which no certified values of this species exist. The Me3Pb+ concentrations in the biological reference materials vary in the range of 0.3-17 ng g(-1) (as Pb) except for the Antarctic Krill (MURST-ISS-A2), where the concentration was less than the detection limit of 0.09 ng g(-1), which was also found for the sediment. Up to 20% of total lead was methylated in the biological reference materials, whereas much higher methylation fractions were found for mercury. The method was also applied to seafood samples purchased from a supermarket with Me3Pb+ concentrations in the limited range of 0.3-0.7 ng g(-1). On the contrary, the portion of methylated lead in these samples varied over more than 2 orders of magnitude from 0.02 to 7.5%.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2005-01-15 | Analytical Chemistry |