posted on 2015-06-16, 00:00authored bySalvatore Caprara, Luis M. Laglera, Damiano Monticelli
A new
method based on adsorptive cathodic stripping voltammetry
with catalytic enhancement for the determination of total dissolved
iron in seawater is reported. It was demonstrated that iron detection
at the ultratrace level (0.1 nM) may be achieved in small samples
(500 μL) with high sensitivity, no need for purging, no added
oxidant, and a limit of detection of 5 pM. The proposed method is
based on the adsorption of the complex Fe/2,3-dihydroxynaphthalene
(DHN) exploiting the catalytic effect of atmospheric oxygen. As opposite
to the original method (Obata, H.; van den Berg, C. M. Anal.
Chem. 2001, 73, 2522–2528), atmospheric
oxygen dissolved in solution replaced bromate ions in the oxidation
of the iron complex: removing bromate reduces the blank level and
avoids the use of a carcinogenic species. Moreover, the new method
is based on a recently introduced hardware that enables the determinations
to be performed in 500 μL samples. The analyses were carried
out on buffered samples (pH 8.15, HEPPS 0.01 M), 10 μM DHN and
iron quantified by the standard addition method. The sensitivity is
49 nA nM–1 min–1 with 30 s deposition
time and the LOD is equal to 5 pM. As a result, the whole procedure
for the quantification of iron in one sample requires around 7.5 min.
The new method was validated via analysis on two reference samples
(SAFe S and SAFe D2) with low iron content collected in the North
Pacific Ocean.