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Quantitation of Perchlorate Ion: Practices and Advances Applied to the Analysis of Common Matrices*

 

作者: EdwardTodd Urbansky,  

 

期刊: Critical Reviews in Analytical Chemistry  (Taylor Available online 2000)
卷期: Volume 30, issue 4  

页码: 311-343

 

ISSN:1040-8347

 

年代: 2000

 

DOI:10.1080/10408340008984163

 

出版商: Taylor & Francis Group

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

In 1997, low-level perchlorate contamination (<50 ng mL−1or parts per billion) was discovered in the western U.S. Since that time, it has been found in sites scattered around the nation. Although the Environmental Protection Agency has not established a regulation for perchlorate in drinking water, it has placed perchlorate on the contaminant candidate list (CCL) and the unregulated contaminants monitoring rule (UCMR). A provisional and unenforceable concentration of 18 ng mL−1will stand until at least late 2000 when EPA hopes to issue a revised toxicological assessment. However, the need for techniques and methods for determining perchlorate is not constrained to environmental chemistry. Perchlorate salts are used pharmaceutically in Europe to treat Graves' disease and amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis. Ammonium perchlorate is used as a solid oxidant in space shuttles and intercontinental ballistic missiles. Thus, methods and techniques are necessary for quality control and quality assurance. Moreover, analysis of explosives and post-explosion residues have made quantitation of perchlorate important in forensic chemistry. A variety of techniques is available: gravimetry, spectrophotometry, electrochemistry, ion chromatography, capillary electrophoresis, mass spectrometry—each has its strengths and weaknesses. Within each technique, assorted methods are available with corresponding limits of detection. As the breadth of matrices undergoing analysis expands from potable water to agricultural runoff, fertilizers, fruit juices, or physiological and botanical fluids, the risk for interference becomes greater. As toxicologists demand lower and lower limits of detection, it falls to analytical chemists to ensure selectivity and sensitivity go hand-in-hand. In the near future, we can expect refinements in sample pretreatment and clean-up as well as analytical methods geared toward analyzing more complex matrices. Ion chromatography, capillary electrophoresis, Raman spectrometry, and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry will all play roles in environmental analysis; however, IC should be expected to dominate drinking water analysis. This review describes the state of the science and how it might be applied, and looks forward to where it is going and how it might get there.*Note: This paper is an original U.S. government work and is not subject to copyright.

 

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