An
analytical technique based on electroadsorption and transmission
X-ray fluorescence (XRF) for the quantitative determination of arsenic
in aqueous solution with ppb-level limits of detection (LOD) is proposed.
The approach uses electroadsorption to enhance the sensitivity and
LOD of the arsenic XRF response. Amine-functionalized carbonaceous
microspheres (NH2–CMSs) are found to be the ideal
materials for both the quantitative adsorption of arsenic and XRF
analysis due to the basic amine sites on the surface and their noninterference
in the XRF spectrum. In electroadsorptive X-ray fluorescence (EA-XRF),
arsenic is preconcentrated by a conventional three-electrode system
with a positive electricity field around the adsorbents. Then, the
quantification of arsenic on the adsorbents is achieved using XRF.
The electroadsorption preconcentration can realize the fast transfer
of arsenic from the solution to the adsorbents and improve the LOD
of conventional XRF compared with directly determining arsenic solution
by XRF alone. The sensitivity of 0.09 cnt ppb–1 is
obtained without the interferences from coexisted metal ions in the
determination of arsenic, and the LOD is found to be 7 ppb, which
is lower than the arsenic guideline value of 10 ppb given by the World
Health Organization (WHO). These results demonstrated that XRF coupled
with electroadsorption was able to determine trace arsenic in real
water sample.