4.7 Article

Trace and ultratrace analysis methods for the determination of phosphorus by flow-injection techniques

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 66, Issue 2, Pages 332-340

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2004.12.056

Keywords

phosphorus; flow analysis; trace/ultratrace analysis

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Trace (<= 1 mg/l or 30 mu M) and ultratrace (< 1 mu g/l or 30 nM) analysis methods for phosphorus determination by flow-injection analysis are reviewed. Most of the methods cited in this review are fundamentally based on the reaction of orthophosphate with molybdate to form heteropoly acids, such as molybdenum yellow and molybdenum blue, and some of the methods are based on the formation of such secondary reactions as ion associates and their aggregates with bulky cations, such as cationic dyes and quaternary ammonium ions. The heteropoly acids themselves can be measured by spectrophotometry, and the ion associate formed with a cationic dye, Malachite Green (MG), can be measured based on the coloration of MG. Light scattering detection methods can be used for measuring the aggregates of ion associates formed with bulky cations. Highly sensitive detection of phosphorus can be accomplished by fluorophotometry; Rhodamine B (RB) and its analogues react with molybdophosphate to form ion associates, which shows fluorescence quenching of RB: LOD is about 5 nM. The detection method based on the chemiluminescence of luminal oxidized with molybdophosphoric acids is probably the most sensitive of all the detection methods reported so far: LOD of the method is as low as 1 nM. The LOD of the molybdenum blue method can be improved by using a liquid core waveguide: LOD is 0.5 nM. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved.

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