Abstract

Chemiluminescence and electrogenerated chemiluminescence (ECL) methods based on the tris(2,2′-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) chemiluminescence reaction were compared for the analysis of morpholine fungicides. Both methods proved to be sensitive and selective for the determination of dodemorph. In the chemiluminescence system the tris(2,2′-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) was oxidised with Ce(IV) and the flow rate, coil length and pH were optimised by a multivariate method. In the ECL system, the tris(2,2′-bipyridine) ruthenium(II) was oxidised at an aluminium working electrode. The calibration characteristics of the two methods were similar. The linear range was between 2 × 10−7–1 × 10−5 mol l−1 for the chemiluminescence method and 1 × 10−7–3 × 10−5 mol l−1 for the ECL method. The limits of detection were 4.8 × 10−8 mol l−1 for chemiluminescence and 4.4 x10−8 mol l−1 for ECL. A related fungicide tridemorph was also determined by ECL and the linear range for that was between 5 × 10−7 and 5 × 10−5 mol l−1, with a limit of detection of 4.5 × 10−7 mol l−1. An interference study showed that the main interferences for both methods were ascorbic acid and oxalic acid that interfered at the 2 × 10−6 and 1.0 × 10−6 mol l−1 level, respectively. Good recoveries (96–100%) were obtained for the determination of dodemorph on cotton gloves and laboratory coats although a methanol extraction was used for the chemiluminescence method and a water extraction for the ECL method. This was because methanol depressed the ECL signal. A study of dodemorph uptake in barley was also carried out. Although ECL was the more elegant method for analysis it was less tolerant to methanol and this could be a disadvantage if it were required to extract the analyte from the sample.

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