T. Tanaka et al., Determination of arsenic in iron and steel by differential pulse anodic stripping voltammetry at a rotating gold-film electrode, TETSU HAGAN, 85(2), 1999, pp. 129-134
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Metallurgy
Journal title
TETSU TO HAGANE-JOURNAL OF THE IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE OF JAPAN
A simple, rapid and reproducible method is described for the direct determi
nation of arsenic at the mu g/g level in iron and steel based on differenti
al pulse anodic stripping voltammetry without any separation of iron matrix
. Electroinactive arsenic(V) was chemically reduced to arsenic(III) by pota
ssium iodide prior to the stripping voltammetric determination, The interfe
rence of iron(III) was eliminated by reducing it with potassium iodide to i
ron(II). The generated iodine was reduced with L(+)-ascorbic acid. Arsenic(
III) was electrodeposited from a 3 ml aliquot of the acid solution (0.3M HC
l-0.1M HNO3-0.15M KI-0.1M L(+)-ascorbic acid pH=ca. 0.1) containing 3 mg of
a sample on a rotating gold-film electrode (gold plated on glassy carbon)
at -0.5 V v's. SCE for 180 s, The deposit was then anodically stripped at a
scan rate of 40 mV/s to + 0.2 V vs. SCE.
The calibration graph (peak height vs. concentration curve) prepared with s
tandard arsenic solutions was linear in the range from 10 ng/ml to at least
40 ng/ml of arsenic and passed through the origin (correlation coefficient
>0.998); with a sensitivity of ca. 0.2 mu A/(ngAs/ml). Antimony(III), bism
uth(III) and copper(ll) interfered with the arsenic determination severely.
The proposed method has been successfully applied to the determination of
50.4 and 448.8 mu g/g of arsenic in iron and steel, with relative standard
deviations of less than 2.4% (n=5), without any troublesome preconcentratio
n steps using harmful chemicals, For a deposition time of 180 s,about 80% o
f arsenic(III) was accumulated and the detection limit (3 sigma was 1.0 mu
g/g. The time required for an analysis was within 40 min.