Abstract

It is demonstrated that surfactants lead to problems in the analysis of ammonia in gas-diffusion flow injection by wetting the membrane to allow transport of potentially interfering species to the detector. An on-line clean-up procedure, involving use of an activated carbon cartridge, is described for the removal of ionic and non-ionic surfactants (up to 1000 mg l −1) and other organic compounds from aqueous samples. Ammoniacal nitrogen was determined in synthetic samples by gas-diffusion flow injection with a nonactin-based potentiometric sensor used as the detector for the ammonium ion. Analyses could be performed at a sampling rate of ca. 25 h −1 and the cartridge was effective for at least 1000 injections of 50 μl samples in the concentration range 1–180 mg l −1. The procedure was applied to the analysis of wastewaters and was found to be efficient in removing ionic and non-ionic surfactants from acidified (pH 1) samples.

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