A number of applications of the sodium tetrahydroborate(iii)
(sodium borohydride) reagent in the determination of arsenic, selenium,
sulfur and tin species are reviewed. The reaction of an analyte species
with aqueous tetrahydroborate(iii) is most frequently employed to yield a
volatile hydride product which can be readily removed from the bulk
matrix. This results in the isolation of the analyte from interferents and
gives a species which can be readily concentrated and separated from other
species. Some simple speciation analyses, such as the differentiation of
arsenite and arsenate, can be performed by careful control of reaction
conditions. With more complex molecules some of the original chemical
structure of the target species (such as a C–As bond) can be
conserved in the reaction products, permitting the deduction of further
speciation information. Arsenic oxy-anions
[R
n
AsO(OH)
3-n
, where R=alkyl
or aryl] and alkyltin species, for example, yield different arsines
(R
n
AsO(OH)
3-n
) and
stannanes, respectively, which can be cryogenically trapped and
subsequently separated by distillation or gas–liquid chromatography.
More recently, analyte reactions with tetrahydroborate(iii) have been
employed to provide a powerful link between the components employed in
hyphenated instrumentation. One of its most significant roles is in the
development of HPLC instrumentation where it can be employed to generate
gas phase analyte species which are compatible with sensitive and highly
selective gas/vapour detection systems such as AAS, AES and ICP-MS.
Examples are given in which the tetrahydroborate(iii) reaction link is
employed in the coupling of HPLC with AAS. The addition of photochemical
oxidation or microwave digestion steps prior to the tetrahydroborate(iii)
reaction stage further extends the range of detectable compounds. Whilst
the tetrahydroborate(iii) reagent is largely associated with the
generation of volatile analyte hydrides, this is not always the case.
Cold-trap methods, for example, can be employed to measure some
trimethylarsenic compounds by the production of trimethylarsine and
alkyltin hydrides can be preconcentrated by solvent extraction. HPLC
instrumentation is also described which employs the tetrahydroborate(iii)
gas phase/liquid phase link to generate volatile sulfur species which are
compatible with flame photometric
detection.
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