Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal

As one of the most widely used techniques for concentration determination of trace elements in coal, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) has also been used in several studies for the determination of mercury concentration in coal. ICP-MS after closed-vessel microwave digestion and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Siyu Zhang, Mingxuan Zhou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8867653
id doaj-f4f83209ad0d4e3cb881a7938039f605
record_format Article
spelling doaj-f4f83209ad0d4e3cb881a7938039f6052020-12-28T01:30:40ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry2090-88732020-01-01202010.1155/2020/8867653Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in CoalSiyu Zhang0Mingxuan Zhou1State Key Laboratory of Coal Resources and Safe MiningState Key Laboratory of Coal Resources and Safe MiningAs one of the most widely used techniques for concentration determination of trace elements in coal, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) has also been used in several studies for the determination of mercury concentration in coal. ICP-MS after closed-vessel microwave digestion and a Milestone DMA-80 are employed in this study to determine the mercury concentration in coal. Three NIST  standard references of coal samples were selected as references to verify the accuracy of the test results. The Au rinse solution (200 μg/L, 5% HNO3) can diminish mercury memory effects to a blank level within 80 seconds. The results showed that ICP-MS can accurately determine the mercury content in mercury standard solutions, but the mercury concentration in most NIST samples after microwave digestion is lower than the detection level of the ICP-MS. The inaccuracy may be due to volatilization of mercury during solid sample digestion process. By contrast, the determined concentrations in NIST samples by the Milestone DMA-80 are very close to the verified values. Therefore, ICP-MS is not recommended to analyze mercury in coal after digestion even in a closed-vessel digestion system, but the mercury direct analyzer (without digestion) is recommended to analyze mercury in coal.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8867653
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Siyu Zhang
Mingxuan Zhou
spellingShingle Siyu Zhang
Mingxuan Zhou
Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
Journal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry
author_facet Siyu Zhang
Mingxuan Zhou
author_sort Siyu Zhang
title Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
title_short Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
title_full Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
title_fullStr Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of DMA-80 and ICP-MS Combined with Closed-Vessel Microwave Digestion for the Determination of Mercury in Coal
title_sort comparison of dma-80 and icp-ms combined with closed-vessel microwave digestion for the determination of mercury in coal
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Analytical Methods in Chemistry
issn 2090-8873
publishDate 2020-01-01
description As one of the most widely used techniques for concentration determination of trace elements in coal, inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) has also been used in several studies for the determination of mercury concentration in coal. ICP-MS after closed-vessel microwave digestion and a Milestone DMA-80 are employed in this study to determine the mercury concentration in coal. Three NIST  standard references of coal samples were selected as references to verify the accuracy of the test results. The Au rinse solution (200 μg/L, 5% HNO3) can diminish mercury memory effects to a blank level within 80 seconds. The results showed that ICP-MS can accurately determine the mercury content in mercury standard solutions, but the mercury concentration in most NIST samples after microwave digestion is lower than the detection level of the ICP-MS. The inaccuracy may be due to volatilization of mercury during solid sample digestion process. By contrast, the determined concentrations in NIST samples by the Milestone DMA-80 are very close to the verified values. Therefore, ICP-MS is not recommended to analyze mercury in coal after digestion even in a closed-vessel digestion system, but the mercury direct analyzer (without digestion) is recommended to analyze mercury in coal.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/8867653
work_keys_str_mv AT siyuzhang comparisonofdma80andicpmscombinedwithclosedvesselmicrowavedigestionforthedeterminationofmercuryincoal
AT mingxuanzhou comparisonofdma80andicpmscombinedwithclosedvesselmicrowavedigestionforthedeterminationofmercuryincoal
_version_ 1714981192259862528