Abstract

Several derivatizing agents were evaluated for use in speciating mercury in biological samples using solid phase microextraction in conjunction with tandem gas chromatography-furnace atomization plasma emission spectrometry (SPME-GC-FAPES). Following digestion with methanolic potassium hydroxide, the pH of the samples was adjusted and NaCl added when necessary. The mercury species were then derivatized with sodium tetraphenylborate or sodium tetrapropylborate and extracted by SPME using a 100 µm PDMS coated fiber. The derivatized species were then separated by GC and detected by FAPES. All experimental parameters were optimized for best separation and analytical response. Propylation proved to be more sensitive, robust and faster than ethylation or phenylation, leading to procedural detection limits of 0.55 ng g−1 for methylmercury, 0.34 ng g−1 for ethylmercury and 0.23 ng g−1 for inorganic mercury. An intra-day and intra-fiber precision of typically 2.2% was achieved whereas long-term (4 months) and inter-fiber reproducibility precision was typically 4.4%. The accuracy of the method was validated by the analysis of Certified Reference Materials (DORM-2, DOLT-2 and TORT-2) from the National Research Council of Canada.

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