DETERMINATION OF PICOMOLAR CONCENTRATIONS OF TITANIUM, GALLIUM AND INDIUM IN SEA-WATER BY INDUCTIVELY-COUPLED PLASMA-MASS SPECTROMETRY FOLLOWING AN 8-HYDROXYQUINOLINE CHELATING RESIN PRECONCENTRATION
Kj. Orians et Ea. Boyle, DETERMINATION OF PICOMOLAR CONCENTRATIONS OF TITANIUM, GALLIUM AND INDIUM IN SEA-WATER BY INDUCTIVELY-COUPLED PLASMA-MASS SPECTROMETRY FOLLOWING AN 8-HYDROXYQUINOLINE CHELATING RESIN PRECONCENTRATION, Analytica chimica acta, 282(1), 1993, pp. 63-74
Picomolar concentrations of dissolved titanium, gallium and indium in
sea water are measured using in inductively coupled plasma mass spectr
ometry (ICP-MS) after concentration and separation from the major ions
in sea water via an 8-hydroxyquinoline chelating ion exchange resin (
TSK-8HQ). Detection limits of 5-10 pM (0.2-0.4 part per trillion, ppt)
, 0.5 pM (0.02 ppt) and 0.1 pM (0.01 ppt) were found for Ti, Ga and In
, respectively, after a 400-fold (Ti) or 3000-fold (Ga and In) concent
ration. The detection was blank limited for Ti, due primarily to backg
round interferences from the HNO3 matrix, and sensitivity limited for
Ga and In. Open ocean sea water concentrations for these elements are
in the range of 6-300 pM for Ti, 2-60 pM for Ga, and 0.1-2.0 pM for In
. Sampling and analytical precision of 7-10% was generally found for c
oncentrations greater than twice the detection limit.