Abstract

A metallic copper electrode is evaluated as a potentiometric detector for carboxylic acids. The application of this device to ion-exchange chromatography is illustrated by the determination of oxalate in urine. Oxalate was selectively detected in the presence of a 100-fold excess of sulphate after separation on a low-capacity methacrylate anion-exchange column using 0.7mM potassium hydrogen phthalate at pH 7.1 as eluent. Calibration plots were linear up to 50ppm of oxalate. Potentiometric detection has also been applied to ion-exclusion chromatography using 0.005% phosphoric acid as eluent. With this method detection limits of 0.2, 2.1, 5.0 and 5.3µg were obtained for formic, acetic, propionic and iso-butyric acids, respectively.

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