Abstract

Molybdenum is an essential element to humans because of its role in several enzymes, and its occurrence in natural waters is of significance from environmental and biochemical standpoints. Owing to the low concentration of molybdenum in natural waters, pre-concentration is required prior to its determination with atomic spectroscopic techniques. This paper reports on the pre-concentration and determination of molybdenum in the Rouge River, Michigan, USA with graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS). Sample preparation and pre-concentration were performed using ultra-trace analysis methodology in a class 100 clean room laboratory. The molybdenum was pre-concentrated on a Bio-Rad Chelex® 100 resin, followed by elution from the resin with ammonia solution. Subsequently, the single-point standard addition method was used, and the absorbance owing to molybdenum was measured at 313.3 nm. An overall concentration factor of ten was realized for the final pre-concentrated volume, and the results from several sampling locations on the four branches of the Rouge River yielded molybdenum concentrations ranging from 1.98 to 4.21 ug·L-1 with an overall average of 2.94 ug L-1. The precision of the results, based on quintuplet determinations from each sampling site, varied between 6.1 to 8.8 %relative standard deviation (%RSD). Although the concentration of molybdenum in the Rouge River is in line with the lower reported molybdenum levels in the US and world rivers, it is higher than the level that arises from natural sources only and therefore has anthropogenic causes.

Highlights

  • Molybdenum is present predominantly in the VI oxidation state as MoO42- in seawater, tap water, and river water (Du, Li, Yang, & Lu, 2003)

  • This paper reports on the pre-concentration and determination of molybdenum in the Rouge River, Michigan, USA with graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (GFAAS)

  • The concentration of molybdenum in the Rouge River is in line with the lower reported molybdenum levels in the US and world rivers, it is higher than the level that arises from natural sources only and has anthropogenic causes

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Summary

Introduction

Molybdenum is present predominantly in the VI oxidation state as MoO42- in seawater, tap water, and river water (Du, Li, Yang, & Lu, 2003). All polyethylene laboratory ware used for sampling, storing, and preparing the Rouge River water samples for analysis were cleaned and decontaminated using a protocol for minimizing contamination in the analysis of trace metals in natural waters (Nriagu, Lawson, Wong, & Azcue, 1993). The use of this decontamination protocol has been reported in the determination and speciation of copper in Saginaw Bay, Lake Huron (Bazzi et al, 2002) and in the analysis of biological samples for trace metals (Bazzi, Nriagu, Inhorn, & Linder, 2005; Bazzi, Nriagu, & Linder, 2008).

Equipment Cleaning and Decontamination
Instrumentation
Chemical Reagents and Solutions
Resin Form Conversion and Column Preparation
Pre-Concentration and Elution of Molybdenum
Preparation of Single-Point Standard Addition Solutions
Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Measurement
Results and Discussion
Conclusion
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