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AOAC International, Journal of AOAC International, 1(85), p. 219-224, 2002

DOI: 10.1093/jaoac/85.1.219

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Study of the versatility of a graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometric method for the determination of cadmium in the environmental field

Journal article published in 2002 by M. Isabel Rucandio ORCID, M. Dolores Petit Domínguez
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Abstract Cadmium is a representative example of trace elements that are insidious and widespread health hazards. In contemporary environmental analysis, there is a clear trend toward its determination over a wide range of concentrations in complex matrixes. This paper describes a versatile method for the determination of Cd at various levels (0.1–500 μg/g) in several sample types, such as soils, sediments, coals, ashes, sewage sludges, animal tissues, and plants, by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry with Zeeman background correction. The effect of the individual presence of about 50 elements, with an interference/analyte concentration ratio of up to 105, was tested; recoveries of Cd ranged from 93 to 106%. The influence of different media, such as HNO3, HCl, HF, H2SO4, HClO4, acetic acid, hydroxylammonium chloride, and ammonium acetate, in several concentrations, was also tested. From these studies it can be concluded that the analytical procedure is scarcely matrix dependent, and the results obtained for a wide diversity of reference materials are in good agreement with the certified values.