Abstract
Chromium(VI) is one of seven elements which is classified in the fertilizer industry as being harmful to plants and biological systems. Phosphate rocks represent the raw material for complex fertilizer production in the world. This paper investigates for the first time the determination of total chromium in phosphate rocks by ion chromatography. The developed analytical method involves the digestion of phosphate rocks with nitric acid followed by sample treatment of the resulting solution. The digestion solution obtained was treated with an oxidising agent (potassium peroxosulphate) to convert all chromium to the hexavalent state. The analytical method developed utilizes anion-exchange ion chromatography to achieve the separation and spectrophotometric post-column reaction for detection with diphenylcarbazide. The relative standard of deviation from analytical data comparison of six different phosphate rocks with atomic absorption spectrometry and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry techniques, and cross-analysis data against an internationally certified phosphate rock standard were between 0.58 and 1.45%. Calibration curve between 0.2 and 0.9 μg/ml was excellent, and the method has a detection limit for Cr(VI) of 0.05 ng. The developed method offers a fast, a reliable and an alternative procedure for the determination of total chromium in phosphate rock deposits by ion chromatography.
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