Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1241742 Talanta 2016 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The use of aqua regia for microwave digestion causes contamination by chloride species.•Vessel contamination by chloride species hinders the determination of silver.•The use of solution for decontamination is limitedly effective.•A fast and easy decontamination route by heating at 150 °C was devised.•HCl is the major chloride species entrapped in the vessel walls as determined by MS

Microwaves are widely used to assist digestion, general sample treatment and synthesis. The use of aqua regia is extensively adopted for the closed vessel mineralization of samples prior to trace element detection, leading to the contamination of microwave vessels by chlorine containing species. The latter are entrapped in the polymeric matrix of the vessels, leading to memory effects that are difficult to remove, among which the risk of silver incomplete recoveries by removal of the sparingly soluble chloride is the predominant one. In the present paper, we determined by mass spectrometry that hydrogen chloride is the species entrapped in the polymeric matrix and responsible for vessel contamination. Moreover, several decontamination treatments were considered to assess their efficiency, demonstrating that several cleaning cycles with water, nitric acid or silver nitrate in nitric acid were inefficient in removing chloride contamination (contamination reduction around 90%). Better results (≈95% decrease) were achieved by a single decontamination step in alkaline environment (sodium hydroxide or ammonia). Finally, a thermal treatment in a common laboratory oven (i.e. without vacuum and ventilation) was tested: a one hour heating at 150 °C leads to a 98.5% decontamination, a figure higher than the ones obtained by wet treatments which requires comparable time. The latter treatment is a major advancement with respect to existing treatments as it avoids the need of a vacuum oven for at least 17 h as presently proposed in the literature.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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