Abstract

Mercury(II) salts have different decomposition temperatures in a graphite tube or tantalum coil used for electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. The nitrate, perchlorate and acetate were spontaneously reduced to mercury vapor at room temperature, but the thiosulfate, sulfide, cyanide and bromide were reduced only on heating. Chloride and thiocyanate in a graphite furnace and iodide in a tantalum coil did not give mercury absorbance on heating. Thiosulfate (1–10 × 10 −6 M) was determined by addition to mercury(II) nitrate in acetate buffer, removing the response from the excess mercury(II) nitrate by drying below 100° C in the graphite furnace, and measuring the mercury absorbance on heating, which was proportional to the thiosulfate concentration.

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