Abstract

A flow‐injection gas‐diffusion technique is described for the online determination of ammonia in estuarine waters covering a salinity range of S=0 to 36. The flow analysis system, which is a hybrid of reagent injection and conventional sample‐injection flow systems, avoids the need for a rotary injection valve. Whereas gas‐diffusion techniques have been widely applied in conventional sample‐injection flow analysis, reagent‐injection flow analysis involving gas diffusion has been little used because it is susceptible to interference from dissolved gaseous species such as carbon dioxide coexisting with ammonia in the sample. This source of interference has been overcome by online adjustment of sample to pH 8.4 prior to the injection of the base that initiates gas diffusion of ammonia. The pore sizes of hydrophobic membranes used in gas diffusion were characterized by a bubble‐point test prior to use in the flow analysis system. These showed wide variation in pore size, and grading and careful selection was necessary in order to obtain reliable gas diffusion measurements of ammonia. The proposed flow‐injection system can be operated in a continuous flow mode, at a sample throughput of 135 measurements hr−1 with a typical limit of detection (LOD) of 9 µg N L−1, or in stopped‐flow mode at 60 measurements hr−1 with a LOD of 3 µg N L−1. The technique was validated using water samples containing a wide range of dissolved carbon dioxide concentrations, salinity, and pH. Excellent agreement (r=0.999) was observed between results obtained using the reagent‐injection system and an approved reference method. The authors were invited to contribute this paper to a special issue of the journal entitled “Spectroscopy and Automation”. This special issue was organized by Miguel de la Guardia, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at Valencia University, Spain.

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