Search results for "Flow Injection Analysis"
showing 10 items of 73 documents
Sequential-injection determination of traces of disodium phenyl dibenzimidazole tetrasulphonate in urine from users of sunscreens by on-line solid-ph…
2005
Abstract A sensitive and selective method to determine disodium phenyl dibenzimidazole tetrasulphonate (PDT) in the urine of sunscreen users, which is suitable for studies on body accumulation/excretion is proposed. On-line solid-phase extraction allows the analyte to be retained and subsequentely eluted, using a strong anion exchange (SAX) microcolumn. Standard addition calibration was carried out with only one standard. The wavelengths of excitation and emission were 330 and 454 nm, respectively. The method allows PDT to be determined in both, spiked and unspiked human urine samples, without any pre-treatment. Results obtained for spiked urine samples (40–200 ng ml −1 ) showed the accurac…
Chemiluminometric determination of the pesticide 3-indolyl acetic acid by a flow injection analysis assembly
2005
Abstract A new method is proposed for the chemiluminescent determination of the pesticide 3-indolyl acetic acid by means of an flow injection analysis system. The chemiluminescence emission is obtained by oxidation of the analyte with Ce (IV) in nitric acid and presence of β-cyclodextrine. The continuous-flow method allows the determination of 159 samples h−1 of 3-indolyl acetic acid in an interval of concentrations over the range 0.5–15.0 mg l−1. The limit of detection was 0.1 μg l−1 and the R.S.D. (n, 17) at 2.0 mg l−1 of the pesticide level was 2.7%. The method was applied to water samples.
Determination of mercury in dry-fish samples by microwave digestion and flow injection analysis system cold vapor atomic absorption spectrometry
1997
Abstract Flow injection analysis system cold vapor atomic absorption spectrometry (FIAS-CV-AAS) preceded by a wet digestion in a microwave oven, as a method for measuring mercury in fish was studied. The digestion process and conditions of the FIAS (carrier concentration: HCl 3% v v ; reducing agent: SnCl2 2% w v : filling and injection times: 8 and 25 min, respectively; and sample volumes) were optimized. The analytical parameters of the proposed method (detection limit = 7.7 ng/g; precision intraassay = 6.7%; interassay = 14.0%) demonstrates its adequacy and are similar to the ones (detection limit = 19.4 ng/g; precision intraassay = 11.2%; interassay = 15.9%) obtained using a conventiona…
Flow injection Fourier transform infrared determination of caffeine in coffee
1999
Abstract A fully automatized procedure has been developed for the Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopic determination of caffeine in coffee samples. The method involves the on-line extraction of caffeine with CHCl3. Samples, weighed inside empty PTFE cartridges of 0.5 cm internal diameter (i.d.) and 1.5 ml volume, were humidified with four drops of 0.25 M NH3. The cartridge was installed in a flow manifold, in which samples were extracted in a closed-flow system with 1 ml CHCl3 during 6 min. Four hundred microliters of the extract were introduced in a microflow cell and absorbance measured as a function of time at 1659 cm−1, with a baseline established between 1900 and 830 cm−1, …
Flow injection determination of free and total cholesterol in animal greases using enzymes in non-aqueous media
1998
A non-covalently coimmobilized bienzymic reactor of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and cholesterol oxidase (COD), operating in a continuous organic flowing stream of 1 × 10–3 M p-anisidine in buffer-saturated (pH 7.0) toluene, has been employed for cholesterol determination in animal greases, such as pig, beef, and chicken fat, and codfish liver oil. The method provides a good linear relationship up to 1.8 × 10–3 M cholesterol and average recoveries of 99.5%, a high sensitivity, with a detection limit of 1 × 10–6 M of cholesterol and a good precision (an interday RSD of 1.8% for the determination of total cholesterol in a codfish oil sample). The method permits the direct spectrophotometric d…
Flow injection-spectrophotometric determination of cresol compounds in water by reaction withp-aminophenol
1993
A spectrophotometric method has been developed for the simultaneous determination ofo-cresol andm-cresol in water by reaction withp-aminophenol (PAP). Three different methodologies have been assayed; (i) batch analysis, after reaction in an alkaline medium in the presence of dissolved molecular oxygen as oxidizing agent, (ii) a stopped-flow procedure, carried out in the presence of KIO4 and (iii) a flow injection method based on the same approach. The batch procedure requires 22 min for the full development of colour witho-cresol and 12 min form-cresol. In the stopped-flow mode, using KIO4 and a reaction time of 12 min, better sensitivity can be obtained for both compounds and limits of det…
A multicommuted flow system with solenoid micro-pumps for paraquat determination in natural waters.
2007
A flow system designed with solenoid micro-pumps is proposed for the determination of paraquat in natural waters. The procedure involves the reaction of paraquat with dehydroascorbic acid followed by spectrophotometric measurements. The proposed procedure minimizes the main drawbacks related to the standard chromatographic procedure and to flow analysis and manual methods with spectrophotometric detection based on the reaction with sodium dithionite, i.e. high solvent consumption and waste generation and low sampling rate for chromatography and high instability of the reagent in the spectrophotometric procedures. A home-made 10-cm optical-path flow cell was employed for improving sensitivit…
o-Dianisidine: a new reagent for selective spectrophotometric, flow injection determination of chlorine
2002
A flow injection analysis (FIA) procedure for the determination of free chlorine in industrial formulations and water samples is proposed. The manifold is provided with a gas-diffusion unit which permits the removal of interfering species and also the preconcentration of chlorine. The determination of chlorine is performed on the basis of the oxidation by o-dianisidine as a chromogenic reagent to a coloured product which can be monitored at 445 nm. The method (for a preconcentration step of 60 s) is linear over the range 0.04-1.00 mg l(-1) of chlorine, the limit of detection is 0.04 mg l(-1), the reproducibility of the procedure (as RSD of the slope) is 3.7% for a series of four independent…
Zwitterionic Sulfonates as m/z Shift Reagents for 5-Methylcytosine Detection in Deoxyribonucleic Acids (DNA) Using Flow Injection Analysis and Electr…
2015
5-Methylcytosine (5-MC) is an important epigenetic modification of DNA. Abnormally high concentrations of this substance appear because of the hypermethylation of cytosine. Therefore, the measurement of the quantity of this compound in mammals is of great importance. Recently, we reported that several imidazolium-based zwitterionic sulfonates form complexes with 5-MC in solution, which can be studied by electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS). It is shown in this paper that such an association can be utilised for the detection of 5-MC in a DNA sample using high-throughput a flow injection analysis ESI-MS method. A variety of the sulfonate zwitterions have been tested as m/ z shi…
Flow injection biamperometric determination of chloramphenicol and related nitro compounds by on-line chemical photodegradation
2000
Abstract An unsegmented continuous-flow assembly for the determination of chloramphenicol is proposed. The determination is based on the on-line photodegradation of the drug in an NH4+/NH3 buffer at pH 10.4 by using a photoreactor consisting of a 697 cm long × 0.8 mm ID piece of PTFE tubing coiled around an 8 W low-pressure mercury lamp. Photodegraded chloramphenicol is detected by photolytic cleavage of nitrite from the parent compound as well as by organic oxidizing photofragments, and their subsequent reaction with iodide ion, which is monitored biamperometrically. Triiodide thus formed is detected in excess iodide solution by polarizing two platinum electrodes at 100 mV. The calibration…