Abstract

Tetramethyllead and tetraethyllead are highly toxic compounds used as antiknock additives in gasoline. In this work, direct injection of 1- to 10-/sup +/L samples of aviation and motor gasolines onto a C/sub 18/ reverse-phase HPLC column followed by electrochemical detection at a mercury electrode with acetonitrile (0.05 M tetraethylammonium perchlorate) as the eluent provides a specific and sensitive method for determination of tetraalkyllead compounds via direct calibration. The redox process at mercury electrodes employed for detection involves oxidation of the electrode and exchange of alkyl groups. This unique reaction occurs at much lower potentials than the direct oxidation at solid electrodes. The complex matrix in gasolines precludes the determination of tetraalkyllead compounds using oxidation at a glassy carbon or other inert solid electrode detectors. 9 references, 4 figures.

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