M. Gledhill et Cmg. Vandenberg, DETERMINATION OF COMPLEXATION OF IRON(III) WITH NATURAL ORGANIC COMPLEXING LIGANDS IN SEAWATER USING CATHODIC STRIPPING VOLTAMMETRY, Marine chemistry, 47(1), 1994, pp. 41-54
A method is presented to determine the extent of iron complexation by
natural organic ligands in seawater. Catalytic cathodic stripping volt
ammetry (CSV) is used to take advantage of ligand competition between
the added ligand, 1-nitroso-2-napthol (NN), and natural ligands presen
t in seawater. The conditional stability constant for the complexation
of iron by NN was calibrated for salinities between 1 and 36 using li
gand competition with EDTA. The values of log K'(Fe(NN))3 (valid for p
H 6.9 seawater) were found to vary linearly with log salinity accordin
g to log K'(Fe(NN))3 = - 1.04 +/- 0.08 log(salinity) + 30.12 +/- 0.09.
The detection window, defined by the iron complexing ability of NN wa
s altered by varying the concentration of NN. Preliminary measurements
of iron complexing ligands in samples from coastal and open oceanic o
rigin revealed the presence of natural complexing ligands at concentra
tions higher than that of total dissolved iron. The stability constant
s for the complexes were high, log K'(FeL) falling within the range of
18.8-21.2, indicating that by far the greatest component (99%) of the
dissolved iron occurs organically complexed in pH 6.9 seawater. Model
calculations showed that it is possible that the organic fraction may
be somewhat less at a pH value near 8.