4.7 Article

Mercury speciation in edible seaweed by liquid chromatography - Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry after ionic imprinted polymer-solid phase extraction

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2020.121841

Keywords

Ionic imprinted polymer; Solid-phase extraction; Mercury speciation; Edible seaweed

Funding

  1. Direcci 'on Xeral de I + D -Xunta de Galicia: Grupos de Referencia Competitiva [ED431C2018/19]
  2. Direcci 'on Xeral de I + D -Xunta de Galicia: Development of a Strategic Grouping in Materials -AEMAT [ED431E2018/08]

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A pre-concentration method for low mercury levels in seaweed was developed, utilizing an imprinted polymer for selective extraction and determination of mercury species. The method showed low detection limits, good repeatability, and was successfully applied to certified reference materials and edible seaweeds for analysis of methylmercury and Hg(II).
In contrast to most of essential and heavy metals, mercury levels in seaweed are very low, and pre-concentration methods are required for an adequate total mercury determination and mercury speciation in this foodstuff. An ionic imprinted polymer-based solid phase extraction (on column) pre-concentration procedure has been optimized for mercury species enrichment before liquid chromatography hyphenated with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry determination. The polymer has been synthesized by the precipitation polymerization method and using a ternary pre-polymerization mixture containing the template (methylmercury), a non-vinylated monomer (phenobarbital), and a vinylated monomer (methacrylic acid). Factors affecting the adsorption/desorption of Hg species (extract pH, loading and elution flow rates, volume of eluent, etc.), and parameters such as breakthrough volume and reusability, were fully studied. Mercury species were first isolated from seaweed by ultrasound assisted extraction using a 0.1% (v/v) HCl, 0.12% (w/v) L-cysteine, 0.1% (v/v) mercaptoethanol solution. Under optimized conditions, the limits of detection were 0.007 and 0.02 mu g kg(-1) dw for methylmercury and Hg(II), respectively. The pre-concentration factor (volume of 10 mL of seaweed extract) was 50. Repeatability and reproducibility of the method were satisfactory with relative standard deviations lower than 16%. The proposed methodology was finally applied for the selective pre-concentration and determination of methylmercury and Hg (II) in a BCR-463 certified reference material and in several edible seaweeds.

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