Andrew
Taylor
*a,
Martin P.
Day
b,
Sarah
Hill
c,
John
Marshall
d,
Marina
Patriarca
e and
Mark
White
f
aSupra-regional Assay Service, Trace Element Laboratory, Royal Surrey County Hospital, 15 Frederick Sanger Road, Guildford, Surrey GU2 7YD, UK. E-mail: andrewtaylor4@nhs.net
bThe Australian Wine Research Institute, PO Box 197, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, Australia
cLGC, Queens Road, Teddington, Middlesex TW11 0LY, UK
dGlasgow Caledonian University, Cowcaddens Road, Glasgow, G4 0BA, UK
eIstituto Superiore di Sanità, Viale Regina Elena 299, 00161 Roma, Italy
fHealth and Safety Laboratory, Harpur Hill, Buxton, Derbyshire SK17 9JN, UK
First published on 29th January 2015
A theme that emerges from this year's Update is that of ‘green’ chemistry. This, in part, explains the larger than usual number of publications focussing on sample preparation, especially those concerned with the analysis of foods. Procedures that involved dilute acids while still achieving digestion of the specimens were reported by various workers. Meanwhile the trend towards smaller and smaller volumes continues with developments on the micro-scale. These aspects were noted in both the original work and in reviews. Last year saw the large number of papers concerned with metallic prostheses and this topic continues to attract interest. In possibly the first publication in which ICP-MS/MS was used for a clinical application, concentrations of Ti were determined in serum from healthy subjects and patients with hip implants. Concern is evident over the toxicological implications of consumption of rice grown in regions where water is contaminated with As. This has led to several reports of analytical methods and of concentrations in foods and total diets. Localisation of the As into different parts of the plant and the rice was also investigated and, in some reports this included speciation as well as the total As concentrations. Compared with the last few years, Se longer dominates the speciation work reported in this Update and there are more reports relating to As and Hg. A new class of arsenolipids, cationic trimethylarsenio fatty alcohols, were discovered in Capelin Oil. The number of publications applying XRF spectrometry to imaging elements within tissues appears to be increasing with localisation in bone of particular interest. Laser ablation ICP-MS in combination with other techniques, TOF-SIMS, XRD or XPS was also noted, to increase the information obtained.
Advances in sample preparation were covered in four reviews during the past year and the focus in all these was on pre-concentration. Lum et al.7 discussed the use of ionic liquids, sorption by nanomaterials, surfactants and automation, as applied to clinical specimens, pointing out the shorter preparation time and reduced consumption of chemicals when analytical procedures can be reduced to the microlevel. The two other reviews dealt exclusively with ionic liquids. The positive features of the solvents were noted by Escudero et al.8 who contrasted the negligible vapour pressure, thermal stability, miscibility with water and organic solvents, with environmentally unfriendly organic solvents. This review covered dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction and single drop microextraction techniques, with a comparison of LODs and environmental compatibility, and discussed critical issues and challenges associated with their use. Saraji et al.9 restricted their interest to dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction with an extensive discussion of the extraction and disperser solvents, combination with other extraction methods, automation of procedures, derivatisation reactions and application to extractions of metals. Again, the rapidity, low cost and low consumption of solvents and other reagents associated with the technique was emphasised. These reviews illustrate the trend towards “green” chemistry, a feature observed elsewhere in this Update. Research published during the last 20 years, from Latin America, relating to preconcentration, speciation and determination of elements in biological specimens, was reviewed by Pacheco et al.10
In a review of the analytical techniques, Gao et al.11 discussed HG, cold vapour, photochemical and electrochemical VG as applied to ICP-MS. The authors also included alkylation and ID calibration protocols. Reflecting work included in our recent Updates, reviews of continuum source AAS and imaging by LA-ICP-MS have been published. Bernhard Welz (an AAS patriarch!) and colleagues12 presented a critical review of the past, present and thoughts about the future aspects of continuum source AAS. Similarly, Becker et al.13 bring their experience with LA-ICP-MS to a review this technique for quantifying trace elements and isotopes within tissue sections with recent improvements in ablation systems, operation and cell design providing progressively better spatial resolutions down to 1 mm.
Reviews devoted to the measurement of specific elements featured As speciation, halogens in a range of specimen types and Sb in blood. Chen et al.14 described methods developed during the last five years for speciation of As. Approaches to preparation of specimens and the measurement techniques were discussed and HPLC-HG-ICP-MS was proposed as the most powerful procedure. Mello et al.15 reviewed work published in the last 20 years on the measurement of halogens in biological samples, food, drugs and plants. Sample preparation, analytical methods and the availability of CRMs for the determination of Br, Cl, F and I were discussed. Human exposure to Sb has been the subject of a series of reviews in recent years and concentrations in whole blood and serum/plasma of non-exposed subjects were presented in the last of these.16 In addition to a compilation of results from published reports, the authors discussed problems associated with measurements in these samples.
Reference materials for elemental species are scarce. The accurate determination of MeHg is of particular interest, due to the growing concern for its potential toxicity for vulnerable population groups exposed through the diet. Ulrich and Sarkis19 reported the preparation and certification of a fish based RM for the content of Hg (0.271 ± 0.059 μg g−1) and MeHg (0.245 ± 0.053 μg g−1). Both FI-CVAAS and ID-ICP-MS were applied to determine the certified values.
The accuracy of the determination of the concentrations of electrolytes in serum is a critical issue, owing to the importance of even small variations of such values for the diagnosis and monitoring of diseases. Two groups of researchers reported improvements of reference methods in this area. Yu et al.20 at NIST described a faster method, as compared to the tedious preparation required by TIMS, for the determination of Ca, K and Mg after a simple dilution of serum samples. Measurements were carried out by SF-ICP-MS, using 44Ca, 26Mg and 41K for ID. Polyatomic interferences on the measurements of the 42Ca:44Ca and 24Mg:26Mg were substantially resolved at medium resolution, whereas residual interferences on the ratio 39K:41K could not be eliminated completely at levels below 100 ng g−1 even using the high resolution mode. The analysis of NIST SRM 956 provided values (mean ± expanded uncertainty) comparable to the certified ones (obtained values vs. certified ones, respectively: Ca, 10.14 ± 0.13 vs. 10.17 ± 0.06 mg dL−1; Mg, 2.093 ± 0.008 vs. 2.084 ± 0.023 mg dL−1; K, 15.48 ± 0.11 vs. 15.55 ± 0.13 mg dL−1). Comparable results were obtained by a separate group in Germany,21 using the same technique for the simultaneous determination of a wider panel of elements (Ca, Cl, K, Li, Mg and Na) after dilution of the serum samples with 4 mmol L−1 HNO3. Coefficients of variations ranged from 0.46% for K to 0.78% for Mg and the analysis of NIST SRMs gave mean biases between −0.46% (K) and 0.85% (Cl). The results were also comparable to those obtained with reference methods based on different analytical principles (AAS, FAES and coulometry).
The first step to ensure the traceability of analytical results is the calibration of analytical instruments, in order to establish a meaningful relationship between instrumental signals and concentrations or mass fractions. The availability of appropriate materials, representing known values of the quantities to be measured, is therefore essential. In many cases, these will be solutions, accurately prepared from pure metals or other compounds. Other techniques, among which XRF and LA-ICP-MS, require more complex strategies to produce reliable calibrating materials. Inui et al.22 devised a clever approach to this problem for the determination of Cd in rice by XRF, by producing rice grains with a known amount of Cd embedded. This was achieved by soaking the rice grains in MeOH containing a stated amount of Cd, followed by heating and cooling. The materials could be produced at different Cd mass fractions, determined via AAS, and stored in appropriate plastic containers.
The last but not least step when reporting a measurement results is the assessment of its uncertainty. Due to the complexity of analytical measurements, this is not a straightforward task. Coelho et al.23 undertook the task to compare the outcomes of two different approaches (modelling vs. using data from method validation and participation in PT) applied to the estimate of the uncertainty of measurements of As, Cd, Cr and Pb performed by ICP-MS in several food matrices. They concluded that similar results were obtained with either approach when the expanded uncertainty was less than 20%.
Interpreting the results of clinical and other studies requires knowledge of reliably produced reference ranges, determined in appropriate specimens. Several useful reports have been presented during this review period. Those noted here are for studies where the authors have included sufficient information concerning specimen collection and analytical quality assurance for the results to be accepted with reasonable confidence and/or where the data refer to examples where there are few other reports.
In an excellent multi-element study, Cesbron et al.24 determined the concentrations of 27 elements in blood and plasma samples, collected in 2012, from 106 healthy adult French subjects. None were occupationally exposed to metals, receiving any medication or supplements and had no metal prostheses. Tobacco use and the number of dental amalgams were noted. Results were presented as the median and 5th to 95th percentile range. Differences between male and female subjects were seen for Cu and Zn while Cd and Pb concentrations were higher in smokers. Concentrations of 16 elements were measured by Liu et al.25 in 440 plasma specimens collected from children aged 3–12 years, as part of the Chinese National Nutrition and Health Survey Project 2002. The cohort were from economically developed rural areas. Results were presented by age groups and gender. X-ray fluorescence spectrometry was used by Redigolo et al.26 to measure the concentrations of Ca, Cl, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Na, P, S and Zn in blood samples from Brazilian adults. Brodzka et al.27 analysed urine samples from 16 Polish subjects. The ICP-MS procedure was fully described and results obtained for CRMs and performance in the German proficiency testing scheme were presented. Results, as the geometric mean ± geometric SD, for 11 elements were reported as μg g−1 creatinine and as μg L−1. In one other multi-element report, Mikulewicz et al.28 presented a systematic review of published reference ranges for trace elements in hair. From 52 papers identified by a literature search, 47 were rejected because of insufficient detail. Data from the remaining five were combined and provided the raw material for the review which showed the methods used for sample preparation and tabulated ranges for 24 elements, presented as macro-elements, essential trace elements, toxic elements and ‘other’ trace elements (Li, Sr, V).
Single element reference ranges were reported for Hg species in urine, Sb in serum and plasma, Se in blood and serum and Tl in urine. Leese et al.29 found that the 95th percentiles for AsIII, AsV, MMA, DMA and AB in urine specimens from 95 non-occupationally exposed adults were 0.99, 0.35, 3.08, 16.08 and 174.7 μmol mol−1 creatinine, respectively. The review by Filella et al.16 tabulates ranges from more than 30 publications referring to various study groups such as health subjects, patients with hypertension, kidney disease, newborn infants. Selenium concentrations were measured in specimens of serum for premature infants by Peirovifar et al.30 Cord blood samples were collected from 54 babies born at less than 30 weeks gestation and Se concentrations were 64.78 ± 20.73 μg L−1 in blood and 60.33 ± 26.62 μg L−1 in the serum. Urine specimens from 113 non-occupationally exposed healthy adults were analysed by Staff et al.31 to define a reference range for concentrations of Tl. The median value was 0.11, with an upper concentration of 0.27 μmol mol−1 creatinine.
A further series of papers provide details of the reference ranges for elements of interest in patients with metal implants. In an extensive systematic review Matusiewicz,32 tabulated concentrations of Co, Cr, Mo, Ni and Ti in blood, serum, urine and synovial fluid specimens from patients with metallic implants (knee, hip and orthodontic). Results from more than 60 studies were shown and in addition to concentrations found in the patients the tables also included the control values reported. In an original publication, Savarino et al.33 determined the concentrations of Cr, Co, Mo and Ni in serum specimens from patients with metal hip prostheses and from 48 healthy control subjects. The reference ranges obtained were 0.06–0.67, 0.08–0.53, <LOD and 0.10–0.81 μg L−1, for Cr, Co, Mo and Ni, respectively. As part of a study to develop a highly sensitive and accurate procedure for measuring concentrations of Ti in serum, Balcaen et al.34 analysed specimens from four healthy subjects. Careful attention was paid to contamination control throughout the study and the results obtained were; 0.27, 0.29, 0.32 and 0.80 μg L−1.
The initial preparation for hair and nail specimens involves a washing procedure in an attempt to remove exogenous contamination. Tipple et al.36 were interested in measuring Sr isotope ratios in hair using MC-ICP-MS and investigated five washing protocols of varying aggressiveness. Different isotope ratios were found in leachates and in treated hair and it was inferred that Sr incorporated into hair or as surface contamination could therefore be discriminated. From this experiment, it was concluded that the most aggressive washing procedure best allowed determination of internal and external hair Sr concentrations. In their study, Gherase et al.37 however, do not indicate whether nail specimens analysed to determine the distribution of As were subjected to a specific cleaning protocol. Finger and toe nail clippings were embedded in polyester resin and cut into 270 μm sections for measurement by XRF spectrometry.
Element | Matrix | Technique | Sample treatment/comments | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Al | Parenteral nutrition compounds and solutions | ETAAS | A survey of parenteral nutrition compounds and solutions revealed Al content exceeding the maximum allowable level of 25 μg L−1, leading to potential excessive Al exposure of patients | 35 |
As | Blood, urine | RNAA, ICP-MS | The RNAA method applied for the certification of As content at three levels in blood (SRM 955c) and two levels in urine (SRM 2668) RMs was reported. Certified values, obtained combining both RNAA and ICP-MS results provided by NIST and other collaborating laboratories, were 10.81 ± 0.54 and 213.1 ± 0.73 μg L−1 for urine and 21.66 ± 0.73, 52.7 ± 1.1, and 78.8 ± 4.9 μg L−1 for blood CRMs, respectively | 161 |
As | Cells | LC-ICP-MS | The in vitro toxicological characterization of two arsenosugars and six of their metabolites was reported. Whereas DMAV–sugar–glycerol and DMAV–sugar–sulfate, as well as four of their metabolites (oxo-dimethylarsenoacetic acid, oxo-dimethylarsenoethanol, thio-dimethylarsenoacetic acid and thio-dimethylarsenoethanol), showed no toxic effect, two others (dimethyl-arsenic acid and thio-dimethylarsinic acid) did. Additionally, bioavailability of the arsenosugars and their metabolites was tested on the Caco-2 intestinal barrier model | 129 and 130 |
As | Nails | SR-XRF | As distribution in nail clippings from 3 healthy human subjects was investigated using the microbeam experimental setup of the hard X-ray micro-analysis beamline from the Canadian light source synchrotron | 37 |
As | Urine | LC-ICP-MS | The concentrations of five As species (AB, AsIII, AsV, MMAV and DMAV) were determined in urine samples from 95 non-occupationally exposed volunteers, following an anion exchange separation on a micro LC system coupled to ICP-MS. Consumption of fish, shellfish and red wine, but not smoking, significantly increased AB, DMA and MMA urinary concentrations | 29 |
As | Urine | In a study of As species in urine samples from children chronically exposed to As in drinking water, special precautions were taken to preserve MMAIII during collection, storage and analysis. However, MMAIII was detected in only 41 out of 643 urine samples stored deep frozen for 3–6 months, and only in two samples the MMAIII level was >1 μg L−1. It was concluded that MMAIII may have limited value as an epidemiological biomarker | 128 | |
Au | Tissues | MALDI-Q-TOF-MS | DDC was added to wet-ashed tissue samples to form the Au and Pt chelate complexes, which were then detected by MALDI-Q-TOF-MS, with LODs of 0.8 ng g−1 (Au) and 6 ng g−1 (Pt) | 71 |
Be | Tonsils | ICP-AES | As a potential biomarker of exposure to environmental pollution, Be concentrations were determined in 379 tonsil samples, after acid digestion with HNO3. A reference range (0.02–0.04 μg g−1) was proposed for the concentration of Be in pharyngeal tonsils of children | 162 |
Ca | Bone | SIMS | TOF-SIMS was applied to mapping the distribution of Ca in bones, with a lateral resolution of up to 1 μm. For calibration, Ca hydroxyapatite collagen scaffolds were synthesized and characterised | 72 |
Ca | Serum | SF-ICP-MS | A reference method was developed for the determination of Ca, K and Mg in serum by ID with SF-ICP-MS, after spiking with a mixture of isotopically enriched elements (44Ca, 41K and 26Mg). The ratios 42Ca:44Ca and 24Mg:26Mg could be measured at medium resolution, whereas, at levels below 100 ng g−1, the 39K:41K ratio remained affected by the presence of ArH, even at high resolution | 20 |
Ca | Urine | AMS | The reliability of determinations of 41Ca in urine by AMS was demonstrated by a comparison between two facilities (the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the Purdue Rare Isotope Laboratory) | 163 |
Cd | Hair | AFS | The simultaneous determination of Cd and Pb concentrations in digested single human hairs was achieved by coupling tungsten coil electrothermal vaporization with Ar–H2 flame AFS | 89 |
Cd | Tablet CRM | ID-ICP-MS | The certification of a tablet CRM (NIST SRM 3280) for the content of 13 vitamins, 26 elements and two carotenoids was reported. Extensive sample pretreatment was necessary to separate Cd from interfering ions (Sn and Mo). A desolvating nebulizer system reduced the remaining interference from MoO, allowing the measurement of both the 111Cd:113Cd and 111Cd:114Cd isotope ratios by either Q-ICP-MS or SF-ICP-MS. Cd mass fraction was quantified as 80.15 ± 0.86 ng g−1 (mean ± 95% expanded uncertainty) | 17 and 18 |
Co | Biological and water samples | ICP-AES | Predictions from an artificial neural network approach were applied to the extraction efficiency of Co from biological and water samples using magnetic nanoparticles. Determinations of Co concentrations were performed after batch solid-phase extraction, carried out with 0.75 mg L−1 of complexing agent (1-(2-pyridylazo)-2-naphthol), 125 mg L−1 of nanoparticles, at an initial pH 11.0 and an extraction time of 12.5 min. The LOD was 7.0 ng L−1and the RSD% at 10 μg L−1 was 2.1% | 164 |
Co | Blood, serum | ICP-MS | The levels of Co and Cr in blood of 40 patients with hip prostheses with metal-on-metal coupling were compared with the amount of debris in the synovial fluid, determined by SEM-EDX, to assess the value of measurements of Co and Cr in serum and/or blood for monitoring the wear process of these prostheses | 113 |
Co | Synovial fluid, blood, serum | ICP-MS | Co levels were significantly higher in blood, serum and synovial fluid samples from 32 subjects with metal-on-metal hip prosthesis than in the corresponding samples from 22 controls. Co concentrations in blood were higher than in serum, but both were strongly correlated with those in synovial fluid | 112 |
Cr | Blood, serum | ICP-MS | See Co, ref. 113 | 113 |
Cr | Urine | ICP-MS | The capabilities of Q-ICP-MS with universal cell technology for the determination of the concentrations of Cr and Ni in urine for biomonitoring purposes were explored. Using He at 6.0 mL min−1 as the collision gas and the kinetic energy discrimination mode, polyatomic interferences on 52Cr and 60Ni were removed and LODs of 0.162 μg L−1 (Cr) and 0.248 μg L−1 (Ni) were achieved, which compared well with those attained by SF-ICP-MS. RSDs were <10% and analysis of NIST SRM 2668 provided values within the 95% confidence intervals for the certified values | 64 |
Cu | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | To assess the relevance of menstruation on the observed difference between the isotopic composition of Cu and Fe in whole blood in men and women, Cu, Fe and Zn isotopic concentrations were determined in whole blood samples from non-menstruating women, either in their menopause or carrying an intra-uterine device. No difference associated with menstruation or age was observed in comparison with a male reference population, but, for Zn only, a significant difference was reported between the two groups of women studied | 116 |
Cu | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | Cu, Fe and Zn isotope ratios were determined by MC-ICP-MS after LC on an ion exchange resin in blood samples from 39 Yakut volunteers from Sakha Republic, Russia. Increasing age affected the 66Zn:64Zn ratio (increased) and the 65Cu:63Cu ratio (decreased), but not the Fe isotopic composition. Both Cu and Zn isotope ratios were significantly different from those observed in European and Japanese populations | 115 |
Cu | Liver | LIBS | A novel application of LIBS was reported, aimed to detect Cu concentrations in human liver for the diagnosis of Wilson's disease. For these measurements, a Nd:YAG laser at 532 nm and an echelle type spectrometer were used | 85 |
Eu | Organs | ICP-MS | The fate of Eu-doped Ga2O3 nanoparticles, intratracheally instilled into mouse lung, was investigated by collection, acid digestion and analysis of the target organs 24 h after treatment. The assumption that intact nanoparticles were measured was based on experimental evidence of a protein corona coating the nanoparticles, poor solubility in biological fluid surrogates and an elemental ratio corresponding to that of the nanoparticle constituents. Most of the dose was found in the lung or was excreted in faeces, with traces present in all the studied organs | 136 |
Fe | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | See Cu, ref. 116 | 116 |
Fe | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | See Cu, ref. 115 | 115 |
Fe | Brain | ETAAS | Fe levels were determined, after microwave-assisted acid digestion, in post-mortem samples from 14 different areas of the brain collected from 42 subjects, aged from 53 to 101 years. Globally, Fe levels increased with age, but the Fe distribution in the different areas was highly variable | 133 |
Fe | Diet | MC-ICP-MS | The accurate determination of Fe isotopic composition in 60 food products representative of the German diet highlighted differences between vegetables, crop food and food of animal origin. This information was used to determine fractionation factors for Fe intestinal absorption in vegetarians and omnivores | 165 |
Fe | Exhaled air | ICP-MS | As part of an investigation of potential biomarkers of exposure to welding fumes, the content of Fe and Mn in endogenous particles in exhaled air was determined by ICP-MS in samples collected from 9 individuals, experimentally exposed to welding fumes, revealing increased mean concentrations of Mn (82–84 pg L−1) and Fe (2600 pg L−1) in exhaled air | 119 |
Fe | Serum | ICP-MS, LC-MS/MS | In an attempt to improve the comparability of determinations of the clinical biomarker carbohydrate-deficient transferrin, the separation and quantification of the transferrin sialoforms in human serum was achieved by anion exchange chromatography coupled with ICP-MS. The identity of the separated species was confirmed by LC-MS/MS. Three IDA methods were applied to CRMs to determine both the concentration of each sialoform and the total content of transferrin | 135 |
Ga | Organs | ICP-MS | See Eu, ref. 166 | 136 |
Hg | Blood | GC-ICP-MS | A novel methodology was described for the quantification of three Hg species (Hg, MeHg+, and EtHg+) in whole blood, using the isotopically enriched species 199Hg2+, Me200Hg+ and Et201Hg+ for ID. After spiking with the isotopically enriched species, sample pretreatment involved microwave-aided digestion with 2.0 mol L−1 HNO3, treatment with 1% (w/v) sodium tetrapropylborate (at pH 5.2) and extraction of the propylated Hg species in the headspace using a carboxen/polydimethylsiloxane-coated SPME fibre followed by thermal desorption and determination by GC-ICP-MS. The method was validated using mass balance of the species involved and analysis of the NIST SRM 966, Level 2. An LOD of 30 pg g−1 was reported | 95 |
Hg | Blood, plasma surrogate samples | ICP-AES, ICP-MS, LC-ESI-TOF-MS | A combination of analytical techniques was applied to investigate the behaviour and binding partners of EtHg+, resulting from the decomposition of thimerosal, in human whole blood and plasma surrogate samples | 167 |
Hg | Hair | LA-ICP-MS | The determination of Hg concentrations in hair from captive and wild grizzly bears allowed to assess their exposure to Hg through the diet | 105 |
Hg | Plasma proteins | ICP-MS | Hg-containing proteins from human plasma were separated by on-line 2D-HPLC, based on SEC followed by weak anion exchange LC. The fractions were analysed by both UV and ICP-MS. Human serum albumin was identified as the major carrier for Hg | 168 |
Hg | Water, CRMs (dogfish muscle and human hair) | FI-CV-AAS | Coating the inner wall of a quartz tube atomizer with gold nanoparticles provided an effective in situ trapping method for enhanced Hg determination by means of FI-CV-AAS. Hg desorption was achieved by increasing the voltage (thus the temperature) to 30 V. With 5 mL sampling volume, an LOD of 0.01 μg L−1 was achieved. The RSD was <4.0% at 0.5 μg L−1 | 79 |
I | Hair | ICP-MS | Hair I was investigated as a potential biomarker of I status in an epidemiological study involving 870 subjects. The median I value was 0.499 μg g−1 and no sex-related differences were observed. Levels of I between 0.565 and 0.739 μg g−1 were proposed to correspond to an adequate I status | 131 and 169 |
I | Human milk, urine, kitchen salt | ICP-MS, titrimetry | Elevated I levels in urine (median: 293 μg L−1) of a sample of 33 infants in Brazil were positively correlated with high I levels in maternal milk (mean: 206 μg L−1), both measured by ICP-MS. This was considered to be related to a high I concentration in the kitchen salt used by the mothers, with a mean value, assessed by titrimetry, of 39.9 mg kg−1 | 132 |
I | Urine | HPLC-ICP-MS | The speciation of I in urine was achieved in 7 min by ion-pair RP LC coupled with ICP-MS, using a 12.5 mm C18 guard column, gradient elution and aqueous mobile phases containing tetrabutylammonium hydroxide, as the ion pair reagent, and either NH4Cl, L-phenylalanine or deoxycholic acid. Seven I species (I−, IO3−, mono-iodotyrosine, di-iodotyrosine, tri-iodothyronine, reversed tri-iodothyronine and thyroxine) were determined with LODs of 0.046, 0.047, 0.057, 0.072, 0.093, 0.094 and 0.081 μg L−1, respectively. Recoveries ranged from 93 to 106% | 97 |
I | Urine | ICP-MS | Excessive I intake was reported for 66.4% of the 611 Korean preschool children (aged from 2 to 7 years) involved in a cross-sectional study. I status was assessed from urine I, for which a median concentration of 438.8 μg L−1 was observed | 170 |
K | Serum | SF-ICP-MS | See Ca, ref. 20 | 20 |
Mg | Serum | SF-ICP-MS | See Ca, ref. 20 | 20 |
Mn | Blood, plasma | ICP-MS | Mn concentrations were determined in blood and serum samples after dilution with a solution of 0.005% Triton X-100–0.2% propan-2-ol–0.2% butan-1-ol–1% HNO3 and addition of Ga as the internal standard. The polyatomic interference from FeH on 55Mn was successfully removed using modified (Xt) skimmer cones, whereas the collision cell with 7% H2 in He and flow rates between 4 and 7 mL min−1 was ineffective | 67 |
Mn | C. elegans | LA-ICP-MS | The uptake of Mn in Caenorhabditis elegans, a model organism extensively used in relation with heavy metal induced toxicity, was studied by elemental bioimaging using LA-ICP-MS. The optimization of analytical parameters allowed to achieve intense Mn signals at a spatial resolution of 4 μm | 106 |
Mn | Exhaled air | ICP-MS | See Fe, ref. 119 | 119 |
Mn | Placenta | ICP-MS | To assess a possible association between exposure to Mn and the risk of foetal neural tube defects, the concentrations of Mn (and other 4 elements: Cu, Fe, Se and Zn) were determined in placental tissue from 80 cases and 50 controls. The median Mn concentration was significantly higher in case placentas than in controls (131.60 ng g−1vs.101.54 ng g−1) and elevated Mn levels were associated with increased risk for foetal malformations | 121 |
Ni | Urine | ICP-MS | See Cr, ref. 64 | 64 |
Pb | Bone | SR-XRF | Analysis of 14 human bone samples by SR-μXRF in combination with quantitative backscattered electron imaging allowed sufficient resolution to identify differential accumulation of Pb, Sr and Zn in bone structural units | 109 |
Pb | Hair | AFS | See Fe, ref. 89 | 89 |
Pt | Phantoms | XRF | The potential of L-shell vs. K-shell XRF computed tomography for the imaging of cisplatin was investigated using a Monte Carlo simulation to compare their performance | 139 |
Pt | Serum | ICP-MS | A procedure based on conjoint liquid chromatography on monolithic convective interaction media discs coupled on-line to UV and ICP-MS detectors was applied to the speciation of Pt in human serum incubated with Pt-based anticancer drugs | 92 |
Pt | Serum, albumin | ICP-MS | As part of the development of new anticancer metallodrugs, an investigation of the albumin binding capacity and serum distribution of cis- and trans-isomeric PtII complexes was investigated | 171 |
Pt | Tissues | LA-ICP-MS | Tissue embedding in cold-curing resins improved the standardization of measurements of spatial distribution of Pt in tissues, offering an LOD of 8 μg kg−1 | 101 |
Pt | Tissues | MALDI-Q-TOF-MS | See Au, ref. 71 | 71 |
Sb | Erythrocytes | HPLC-HG-AFS | A procedure consisting of protein precipitation, followed by C18 SPE, EDTA elution, anion-exchange chromatography on a (100 mm × 4.1 mm) PRPX-100 column with 20 mmol L−1 EDTA as the mobile phase, followed by HG-AFS allowed the separation of Sb species from human erythrocyte fractions with recoveries of 90% (SbV) and 55–75% (SbIII). Factors affecting the distribution of Sb species were investigated | 127 |
Se | Blood serum, urine | ICP-MS | Low Mr Se species were separated from human serum and urine using RP and anion exchange chromatography, whereas double column affinity HPLC achieved the separation of selenoproteins and RP-HPLC of the enzymatically hydrolysed fractions allowed to investigate selenoaminoacids. All Se species were detected, after post column spiking with 78Se, by ID-ICP-MS, using 4 mL min−1 H2 as the reaction gas in an octopole reaction cell | 99 |
Se | Serum | ICP-MS | 3 instrumental set-ups (standard mode; collision cell mode using either a H2–He mixture or H2) were compared with respect to the Gd (from MRI contrast agents) interference on the determination of Se in serum by ICP-MS. Only with the collision cell with H2 accurate results were obtained. The method was tested on both CRMs and PT samples spiked with Gd and patients' samples known to contain the Gd contrast agent | 35, 63 |
Sn | Urine | GC | The simultaneous determination of 11 organoSn compounds, including methyl-, butyl-, phenyl- and octyltin derivates, in human urine was achieved using headspace-SPME followed by GC with pulsed flame photometric detection. Recovery of spiked amounts of all analytes at different concentration levels was >87% and RSDs were between 2% and 7%. Care was required to avoid degradation of organoSn compounds in human urine. Satisfactory storage conditions over the first 4 days from collection were found to be at 4 °C and pH 4. The method was applied to the biomonitoring of harbour workers exposed to antifouling paints, confirming the presence of MeSn and BuSn | 172 |
Sr | Bone | SR-XRF | See Pb, ref. 109 | 109 |
Sr | Bone | XAS, ICP-MS | Following the introduction of Sr supplements for the treatment and prevention of osteoporosis, Sr localization in bone tissue was studied in dogs treated with Sr malonate | 91 |
Sr | Bones | XRF | Non-invasive in vivo125I based XRF measurements were used to monitor, over 5 years, bone Sr levels in 10 female volunteers using Sr citrate as a supplement, nine of which were suffering from osteopenia and/or osteoporosis. For analysis, the 14.2 keV Sr K-alpha peak normalized to the coherent peak at 35.5 keV was used | 173 |
Sr | Hair | MC-ICP-MS | High precision measurements of Sr isotopic ratios allowed to address variation caused by aggressive washing treatments and to distinguish internal Sr content from environmental contamination | 36 |
Ti | Blood serum | ICP-MS/MS | ICP-MS/MS was applied to the determination of Ti levels in serum, using a mixture of NH3–He as reaction gas, with an instrumental LOD of 3 ng L−1. A comparison with SF-ICP-MS was carried out on both an RM and human serum samples. Ti levels were typically <1 μg L−1, rising to 2–6 μg L−1 in individuals with Ti-based implants | 34 |
Ti | Tissues | ICP-MS | Tissues of rats exposed to TiO2 nanoparticles were digested with a HNO3–HF mixture prior to determination of the total Ti content by ICP-MS. A comparison of the results obtained on the same samples by 4 laboratories demonstrated good agreement for Ti concentrations >4 μg g−1 | 141 |
Tl | Urine | ICP-MS | Tl levels were measured in urine of 113 non-occupationally exposed people and 447 workers. The reference value, set as the 95th percentile value of a non-occupationally exposed population, was found as 0.27 μmol mol−1 creatinine or 0.40 μg L−1. Median values were 0.11 μmol mol−1 creatinine (0.17 μg L−1) for non-occupationally exposed people, 0.12 μmol mol−1 creatinine (0.20 μg L−1) for general workers and 0.19 μmol mol−1 creatinine (0.41 μg L−1) for thallium workers | 31 |
V | Blood, serum, urine | ICP-MS | V release in whole blood, serum and urine of 129 patients implanted with a titanium alloy hip prosthesis was assessed. 42% of the patients showed serum V values above the reference interval, as compared to 29% in urine and 13% in whole blood. Patients experiencing pain or other problems with the prosthesis also showed a significantly higher excretion of V in urine, as compared with that in asymptomatic patients (p < 0.001). In the remaining group of patients, V values (95th percentile) of 0.3 μg L−1 (whole blood), 0.5 μg L−1 (serum) and 2.8 μg L−1 (urine) were observed | 114 |
Zn | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | The reliability of a previously described method to identify Zn from ZnO nanoparticles in blood of women after dermal exposure to ZnO nanoparticles contained in a sunscreen was confirmed by independent analysis carried out in a different laboratory | 142 |
Zn | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | See Cu, ref. 116 | 116 |
Zn | Blood | MC-ICP-MS | See Cu, ref. 115 | 115 |
Zn | Bone | SR-XRF | See Pb, ref. 109 | 109 |
Various | Eye lenses and aqueous humour | TXRF | Aqueous humour and lens samples, collected from 14 cataract patients, were analysed for the content of selected chemical elements by TXRF after dilution and addition of an internal standard. A high variability was observed. Cr and Mn were present in both media, whereas Ba was found only in the lens and Ni only in the aqueous humour | 122 |
Various | Retina, cornea | PIXE, RBS | Non homogeneous distributions were reported for trace elements in retina and cornea samples from Wistar rats, assessed by PIXE in combination with 3D depth profiling with RBS | 111 |
Various | Bones | XRF | In an investigation of the mechanisms of bone healing in vertebrates, synchrotron rapid scanning XRF was applied, combined with microfocus elemental mapping, to determine the distribution and concentration of trace elements within pathological and normal bone of both extant and extinct archosaurs (Cathartes aura and Allosaurus fragilis) | 110 |
Various | Bones | XRF | The determination of chemical elements together with chemometric analysis was applied to identify the remains of different individuals from common graves | 123 |
Various | Bone implants | XRF, LA-ICP-MS | Combined measurements carried out by XRF and LA-ICP-MS allowed to map the elemental distribution in a nanosilver-coated bone implant | 108 |
Various | Brain | PIXE, RBS | The results obtained with 3 MeV proton and 36 MeV carbon ion beams, applied to 7 μm thick mouse brain sections, were compared | 90 |
Various | Organs | LIBS, ICP-AES | LIBS was investigated as a technique for mapping nanoparticles and trace elements in tissues. Experiments involved mapping Ca, Fe, Gd and Si in mouse kidney slices, after intravenous injection of Gd-based nanoparticles and a comparison with ICP-AES | 86 |
Various | Tissue | LA-ICP-MS | A novel approach combining a UV LA system coupled in parallel with both elemental and molecular MS was described and applied to spatially resolved analysis of the distribution of chemical elements in tissue sections | 107 |
Various (4) | Biological marine samples | ICP-AES | A fast and “green” procedure was proposed for the pretreatment of marine samples prior to the determination of Cu, Fe, Ni, and Zn by ICP-AES. Fish (muscle and liver) tissues and macroalgae were digested using a 20 s microwave-assisted dissolution in choline chloride–oxalic acid, at atmospheric pressure, followed by cooling, addition of 7.0 mL of 2.0 M HNO3, centrifugation, filtration and dilution to a known volume. A comparison with a conventional acid digestion method was carried out and analysis of a CRM (DORM-3) showed recoveries >96.1% for all elements | 44 |
Various (4) | Clay | ICP-MS | The levels of As, Cd, Hg and Pb in clay products, consumed according to local traditions or for health purposes, were assessed. In a total of 63 clay products, sampled from the Dutch market, maximum levels of 45.1 (As), 0.75 (Cd), 2.2 (Hg) and 99.7 (Pb) mg kg−1 were observed. These data, combined with estimated daily use and bioaccessibility, were used to assess the potential risk associated with consumption of these products | 143 |
Various (4) | Sputum | ICP-MS | Metal concentrations measured in sputum samples from 45 subjects with cystic fibrosis (CF), 8 with non-CF bronchiectasis and 8 healthy controls were compared with biomarkers of cellular injury and disease severity. Elevated concentrations of Ca, Mg, Mo and Zn were considered as potential biomarkers | 120 |
Various (4) | CRMs (human hair, stream sediment) | AES | Improved sensitivity (from 2.1- to 6.6-fold) for the determination of the concentrations of Cd, Cr, Hg and Pb by solution cathode GD-AES was achieved by addition to the samples of 0.15% of the ionic surfactant cetyltrimethylammoniumchloride. LODs of 1.0 (Cd), 42 (Cr), 7.0 (Hg) and 2.0 (Pb) ng mL−1, respectively, were achieved. The method was tested on CRMs | 84 |
Various (4) | Liver | LA-ICP-MS | LA-ICP-MS was applied to determine the distribution of 4 elements (Cu, Fe, Mn and Zn) in mouse liver tissue as a model for Wilson's disease. Quantification was based on in-house produced standards. Significant differences were noted for Cu, Fe and Zn, but not Mn, concentrations | 102 |
Various (4) | Serum | ETAAS | Levels of Co, Cr, Mo and Ni were measured in serum of two groups of patients, who had received metal-on-metal hip resurfacing arthroplasty or traditional metal-on-metal total hip arthroplasty | 33 |
Various (5) | Toenails | ICP-MS | The mass fractions of As, Cd, Mn, Ni and Pb in toenail samples from 48 welders were determined as part of an investigation of their potential value as biomarkers of exposure to welding fumes. After adjustment for potentially confounding variables, significant correlations were observed for past (from 7 to 12 months) exposure to Cd, Mn and Pb, but not with years as a welder | 174 |
Various (6) | Exhaled breath condensate | XRF, ICP-MS | The performances of XRF and ICP-MS based methods for the determination of Cd, Cu, K, Mn, Pb and Sb in exhaled breath condensate were evaluated. Recovery of added amounts of the elements studied was the most significant contribution to total uncertainty. The overall uncertainties obtained for ICP-MS enabled to discriminate between groups of individuals exposed to different levels of contaminants | 118 |
Various (6) | Serum | SF-ICP-MS | Candidate reference methods for the determination of electrolytes (Ca2+, Cl−, K+, Li+, Mg2+ and Na+) in serum were presented, based on ID-SF-ICP-MS after dilution of the serum samples with 4 mmol L−1 HNO3. Comparisons with AAS, FAES and coulometry were carried out. Mean coefficients of variation ranged from 0.46% (K+) to 0.78% (Mg2+) and mean biases from the analysis of NIST CRMs varied between −0.46% (K+) and +0.85% (Cl−) | 21 |
Various (9) | Tissue | LA-ICP-MS | LA-ICP-MS was applied to map the spatial distribution of inhaled CdSe quantum dots in mouse lung slices, to support their application as drug delivery carriers and fluorescent markers in bioimaging. Several isotopes were monitored simultaneously (13C, 111Cd, 112Cd, 114Cd, 63Cu, 56Fe, 57Fe, 31P, 34S, 82Se, 125Te and 66Zn) and the results were combined with hematoxylin and eosin stained images. Evidence was reported for the accumulation of CdSe quantum dots in the bronchiolar area, with no degradation over 17 days, and consequent inflammation and immune responses | 103 |
Various (10) | Blood | EDXRF, INAA | Reference values for Ca, Cl, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Na, P, S and Zn in human and animal blood were determined. A comparison with INAA showed comparability of results within statistical limits (alpha = 0.05) | 26 |
Various (11) | Urine | DRC-ICP-MS | The concentrations of 11 elements (As, Al, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni, Pb and Zn) in human urine were determined after a 10-fold dilution with 0.1% HNO3 and addition of Rh as an internal standard. The DRC with CH4 was used to remove interferences on Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni and Rh, whereas O2 was applied for the determination of As. LODs were 0.025 (Al), 0.007 (As), 0.002 (Cd), 0.004 (Co), 0.004 (Cr), 0.086 (Cu), 0.037 (Fe), 0.009 (Mn), 0.016 (Ni), 0.008 (Pb), 0.064 (Zn) μg L−1. The method performance was confirmed by participation in a PT scheme | 27 |
Various (16) | Plasma | SF-ICP-MS | As part of the Chinese National Nutrition and Health Survey Project 2002, the concentrations of 16 elements were determined in plasma samples from 440 children, aged 3–12 years, by SF-ICP-MS. The LOQs ranged from 0.02 μg L−1 (Rb) to 1.89 μg L−1 (Se), between-day RSDs varied from 3.7% (Fe) to 12.7% (Al) and recoveries spanned from 89.82% (Al) to 119.15% (Se) | 25 |
Various (18) | Tablets | ICP-AES | A method was developed and validated to comply with new US Pharmacopeia regulations on elemental impurities. Several elements (As, Cd, Cu, Cr, Fe, Hg, It, Mn, Mo, Ni, Os, Pb, Pd, Pt, Rh, Ru, V and Zn) were determined in tablets by ICP-AES after microwave-assisted acid digestion with a 3:1 v/v mixture of 65% HNO3–37% HCl. Overall, the method was fit for the purpose, but a few issues remained to be solved, i.e. memory effects affecting Os determination and potential spectral interferences for It, Os, Pb, Pt and Rh | 82 |
Various (20) | Blood, urine | SF-ICP-MS | Twenty elements were determined, with LODs ranging from 0.02 to 27 ng L−1, in blood and urine samples from occupationally exposed workers. Sample pretreatment required microwave-aided acid digestion with HNO3 for blood, whereas urine samples were diluted 1 + 49 with 5% v/v HNO3. In the concentration range from 0.01 to 1.0 μg L−1, RSDs between 5 and 10% were achieved, further reduced to <3% for concentrations above 1.0 μg L−1 | 117 |
Various (27) | Blood and plasma | ICP-MS, collision cell-ICP-MS | As a follow-up of a previously reported survey, the concentrations of 27 elements in whole blood and plasma from 106 volunteers with no known professional or medical exposure was determined. Taking into account tobacco consumption and the number of dental amalgams, no significant differences were observed compared to the previous study, except for blood Pb (12.5 vs. 26.3 μg L−1, p = 0.0001) | 24 |
Several approaches for the extraction of Hg from biological samples were reported during the last year. Cavalheiro and colleagues39 used TMAH with microwave heating for tissue specimens, prior to derivatisation and measurement of iHg and MeHg using GC-MS and GC-ICP-MS. The method also determined organoSn compounds. Lower LOQs were obtained when the concentrations of the products were measured by GC-ICP-MS. A preparation method for selective extraction of MeHg from specimens was developed and validated by Masbou et al.40 A two-step extraction/back extraction procedure was employed which provided MeHg yields of greater than 97%. The MeHg was extracted with 3% NaBr:2.5% CuSO4 in toluene and mixed for 1 h. The MeHgBr thus formed in the toluene layer was then back extracted into 0.005 M Na2S2O3 solution as a MeHg–thiosulfate complex. For ID-GC-ICP-MS, the thiosulfate fraction was diluted 10-fold in 0.05% HCl, mixed with isotopically-enriched Hg species and extracted into benzene for analysis. For CV-AFS, the thiosulfate fraction was again diluted with HCl and Hg quantitatively determined following the EPA 1031 protocol using a custom-made gold amalgamation system. The method was validated by analysing MeHg in seven selected biological CRMs. A much simpler protocol was reported by D'Ulivo et al.41 who showed that MeHg would extract from samples using methanesulfonic acid, a reagent widely used for amino acid extraction.
Two reports which proclaim green approaches for specimen preparation may be mentioned. Matusiewicz and Ślachciński42 used 0.1 g sample, extracted with dilute (1%) HNO3 in a 90 bar pressurised system at 280 °C for 10 min. Ten elements were then determined by MIP-OES. Bizzi et al.43 chose to digest powdered samples to eliminate potential matrix effects during the measurements by ICP-MS and ICP-OES. Up to 500 mg of sample was digested in a closed microwave digestion system with 1 mol L−1 HNO3 and 30% m/m H2O2, typically 1.5 and 2.5 mL, respectively. The effectiveness was assessed by analysis of CRMs and determination of residual carbon content. These reports demonstrated that, in addition to reducing the amounts of toxic and hazardous agents entering the environment, low blank values may be obtained with, therefore, improved LODs and RSDs while maintaining the accuracy of the analysis.
Deep eutectic solvents (DES) appear to be a very suitable solid sample digestion media because, as ionic liquids, they interact with microwave energy and having very low vapour pressure, they present as much safer than hot concentrated acids and oxidising agents. Ghanemi et al.44 proposed for the first time the microwave-assisted digestion of fish muscle samples with the DES choline chloride–oxalic acid. The optimum molar composition of the two components was determined as 1:2 since this mixture gave >96% recovery of the metals studied (Cu, Fe, Ni and Zn) measured with ICP-AES. The sample (0.1 g) was mixed with the DES (prepared by combining the components and microwave heating), then microwave heated to 150 °C for 5 min, cooled before addition of dilute HNO3 and centrifugation. Method validation was determined using the CRM DORM-3 and indicated full agreement on accuracy at 95% confidence limit while LODs were 0.08, 0.56, 0.04 and 0.23 μg g−1, respectively. Digestion times were considerably faster than conventional acid digestion and this method can boast safer and more environmentally-friendly credentials.
Further improvements to DLLME methodology proposed by Liang et al.47 involved (i) ultrasound to improve the emulsification of the extractant into the aqueous sample instead of using an organic dispersant, (ii) the use of a surfactant, (iii) a combination of the two. The authors used these combined improvements for the first time in a metal ion preconcentration application. They preconcentrated metals in water and food samples digested with HNO3 and determined Co by ETAAS. Optimisation of appropriate parameters determined DDC as chelating agent at pH 7.0 with CHCl3 as extraction solvent and SDS as the emulsifier. An enrichment factor of 58 was achieved with an LOD of 15.6 ng L−1 from a sample of 5 mL and the RSD was 4.3% at 1.0 ng mL−1; good accuracy was demonstrated by agreement with two CRMs (tea leaf and spinach). Notwithstanding the improvements to DLLME such as those mentioned above, a standard application of the preconcentration methodology was applied for the determination of CuII in drinking water by microsample introduction FAAS.48 The complexing agent was 1-nitroso-2-naphthol and EtOH and CHCl3 were used as dispersion and extraction solvents, respectively. The LOD was 0.95 μg L−1, and the relative error and RSD were −3.3% and 1.9%.
Standard liquid–liquid extraction techniques continue to be modified, optimised and improved despite being one of the earliest and simplest forms of analyte preconcentration for many analytical techniques. Another old extraction variant is homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction (HLLE), in which the analyte and complexing agent in aqueous phase are soluble in the solvent until conditions are modified such that phase separation occurs. This has been adapted for FAAS determination of Pb and Cd in beverages.49 The authors used Na-DDC in acetone and acetate buffer at pH 4 to complex the analytes from the sample (50 mL) which were then extracted into the same volume of perfluorooctanoate dissolved in acidified LiOH. This caused a turbid solution on standing for 5 min, which, after centrifugation, formed into a 100 μL droplet which was subsequently dissolved for FAAS. The enrichment factor was 50 and recoveries were >85% for both analytes and samples of drinking water and wine, however the authors' choice of hotplate acid digestion with HNO3, and H2O2 may not have been the most judicious for such volatile analytes.
Some novel developments involving SPE were seen during this review period. Complex element-specific ligands typically adsorbed onto specific polymer supports have the ability to complex and preconcentrate important analytes. The health impact assessment of the naturally-occurring radionuclides 210Po, 234U, 235U, and 238U, is impaired by difficult sample preparation and poor sensitivity of alpha spectrometry. Having recently proposed the suitability of using polymer-immobilised 1,3,5-OCH3-2,4,6-OCH2COOH-p-tert-butylcalix[6]arene (called AQUALIX tubes) to isolate and preconcentrate Po and U in water samples, Bouvier-Capely et al.50 further optimised their use when paired with determination by ICP-MS. Sample acidification to pH 0.5 ± 0.1 is necessary to eliminate bicarbonate competition and elution is best carried out using dilute HNO3; degassing under vacuum is also necessary for sparkling waters. When 210Po is also present in the sample (e.g. from tracer studies) this has to be removed by deposition onto a Ag disc prior to loading the AQUALIX tubes. From a sample size of 500 mL reported LODs for 234U, 235U, 238U were 0.0006 ng L−1, 0.002 ng L−1 and 0.03 ng L−1, respectively. Another complex ligand ({4-51 amino}-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)diazenyl benzoic acid (AHPMAPDAB), previously synthesised by the authors, was used for determination of Al and Pb by HR-CS-FAAS, after conditions were optimised for analysis of waters and beverages.51 The technique involved mixing ligand with sample, at pH 7, which were adsorbed onto poly(ethyl methacrylates-co-polystyrene) (poly S15-g-EMA120) in a 10.0 × 0.8 cm glass column; the analytes were eluted with dilute HCl with a low flow rate. The Langmuir capacity (qmax) of the sorbent material was 14.6 and 18.4 mg g−1, for Al and Pb respectively which was shown to remain stable for up to 80 adsorption–desorption cycles. Recovery was >95% for both analytes and the relative error against a CRM (trace elements in water NIST1643e) was −2.5% and −2.6%, while respectable LODs of 0.32 and 0.24 μg L−1, respectively, were achieved.
Carbon nano-tubes and particles provide the support for chelating ligands, some new and others more traditional. Functionalised graphene oxide nano-sheets were used as an SPE sorbent in the determination of Cd in seafood samples by FAAS.52 These are sp2-bonded carbon atom monolayers produced from graphite powder and suspended in a mixture of HNO3 and H2SO4 (3:70 v/v) to which KMnO4 was added, then stirred overnight. The product was washed with H2O then H2O2 after which it was ‘exfoliated’ (sic) by sonication to produce the graphene nano-sheets. These were functionalised with dipyridyl groups using triethylamine and dipyridylamine in dried EtOH. The sample was loaded and CdII ions eluted with thiourea in HCl. The maximum CdII adsorption capacity was 392 mg g−1 with an enrichment factor of 416 and recovery >99%. No interference was found from common concomitant cations in seafood samples (As and Hg were not studied). The LOD using FAAS was 0.19 ng mL−1 and the RSD was 1.6% for five replicates. A similar technique allowed Taher et al.53 to propose the preconcentration of Ni from various food matrices and water samples using carbon nano-tubes functionalised with 2-(5-bromo-2-pyridylazo)-5-diethylaminophenol. Analyte ions were adsorbed in the pH range 6.5–8.5 and were desorbed with HNO3. After appropriate optimisation of experimental parameters, the enrichment factor was 180 and, with determination by ETAAS, the LOD was 4.9 ng L−1.
Metal oxide particles can be equally used to immobilise more traditional chelating agents. Magnetic Fe3O4 nanoparticles were functionalised with dithizone (DT) as a new sorbent for the preconcentration of Hg in various foods (green tea, table salt, vegetables), water and toothpaste.54 The sorbent was prepared by refluxing for 24 h an excess of DT added to chloro-functionalised Fe3O4 nanoparticles dispersed in toluene. Samples, appropriately digested if necessary, were adjusted to pH 8.5 and stirred with the magnetic DT-nanoparticles in a beaker for 5 min. A strong magnet was used to retain them in the beaker prior to washing with H2O and Hg was ‘eluted’ with dilute HCl containing thiourea, prior to determination with CF-CV-AAS. For a more conventional in-line implementation of the DT-mediated preconcentration of Hg with CF-CV-AAS determination, Chandio et al.55 immobilised DT on a cartridge of ammonium lauryl sulfate coated alumina particles. The sorbent was prepared by adding ammonium lauryl sulfate and DT (5 mg) to NH4OH into which alumina was added, the suspension acidified to pH 2 with HCl and briefly shaken. The washed and dried sorbent was packed into a cartridge column and sample solution was slowly pumped and then Hg eluted with HCl, for CV-AAS determination. The preconcentration factor was 125 and the LOD was 0.12 μg L−1. The more adsorptive form of alumina, nano γ-alumina, was used with DDC for the preconcentration and subsequent speciation of Sb by FI-SPE-FAAS with a slotted tube atom trap (STAT).56 The dried nano γ-alumina (20 mg), prepared by the citrate sol–gel method from Al(NO3)3, was packed into a PTFE microcolumn. The sample, adjusted to pH 8, and DDC were pumped synchronously through the minicolumn where the SbIII–DDC complex, formed in situ, was adsorbed onto the γ-alumina nanoparticles; the SbV remained in solution. The SbIII was then eluted with HNO3 in MeOH into the STAT-FAAS. Total inorganic Sb was measured after reduction with acidified thiourea. With a measured γ-alumina surface area of 387.2 m2 g−1 and adsorption capacity of 21.5 mg SbIII, the enrichment factor was 56.5; the LOD for this technique was 6.0 ng L−1 for SbIII and 8.2 ng L−1 for SbV with RSDs of 2.8% and 3.5%, respectively. A chelating agent for CdII and PbII, Alizarin red S (ARS), was adsorbed onto TiO2 nanoparticles, for the first time, to increase sorption capacity.57 Glass beads were mixed with the ARS–TiO2 nanoparticles and packed into a microcolumn. Elution into the FAAS was carried out with dilute HCl. A sample volume of 200 mL yielded a preconcentration factor of 100 and LODs were 0.11 and 0.3 ng mL−1 for CdII and PbII, respectively. By layering together different SPE sorbent disks (47 mm diameter), including activated carbon as the middle layer, Hagiwara et al.58 were able to separately determine diphenylarsinic acid, phenylarsonic acid and iAs. Water samples (200 mL) were passed through the stack of discs that were then separated and each species eluted separately before determination with ETAAS.
By far the most intriguing SPE sorbent proposed was the use of mandarin peel (Citrus reticulata) for the preconcentration of Ni in alcoholic beverages for determination by FAAS.59 Peel was prepared from fresh fruit, ground and sieved though 850 μm screens, and washed with dilute NaOH before being packed into a microcolumn. A preconcentration factor of 12 was obtained; LOD and LOQ were 3.1 and 10.3 μg L−1, respectively, and the RSD was 0.9% at 30 μg L−1. A single column was used for 40 successive cycles of preconcentration and elution without loss of stability.
An electrochemical flow cell was used to reduce matrix interferences and improve the LOD of Se speciation with determination by ETAAS.60 A low-volume (3 μL) commercial three-electrode FI measuring cell was coupled to the sample delivery system for the ETA; the working porous carbon electrode was coated at −2000 mV using HAuCl4 and KSCN; the auxiliary electrode was made from Pt wire. During operation, Se0 was accumulated on the working electrode with a current of −1.5 mA and then stripped at +120 mA into a stream of HNO3. This was then delivered into the atomiser. The only interference, from a 50-fold excess of PO43−, reduced the response by 10%.
The coupling of ICP-MS to CE can be challenging to maintain steady flow rates without impacting peak profiles and with a minimum dead volume. Liu et al.68 described the successful use of a commercial interface kit designed for ESI-MS for this purpose. With optimised conditions, they demonstrated the separation of 10 As species in a number of food and environmental samples, achieving baseline resolution within 30 min.
A review of vapour generation techniques for ICP-MS was published by Gao et al.11 covering recent developments in the field. It included HG, cold vapour, photochemical VG, electrochemical hydride, alkylation and other approaches such as volatile metal chelates and halide generation. In order to improve LODs, photochemical VG was combined with ICP-MS and applied to beverages69 and biological samples.38 Volatile species of Co, Ni and Te were generated from alcoholic beverages after treatment with formic and acetic acids and a UV source to allow direct determination by ICP-MS.69 Improvements in the LODs using the VG approach were observed when compared to conventional pneumatic nebulisation. Liu et al.38 also applied photochemical VG with formic acid and UV for the analysis of total Hg in biological tissues. Additionally, the group applied ID as the calibration approach and demonstrated the optimised methodology with CRMs. The LOD for Hg was 0.5 pg g−1 which represented a 350-fold improvement compared with pneumatic nebulisation. For the determination of As, Cu, Hg and Pb in vegetable oils, Hsu et al.70 employed ETV-ICP-MS. The samples were emulsified using a solution of 1.5% Triton X-100 and 50 μg mL−1 ascorbic acid and injected into the furnace with Pd nanoparticles as a modifier. Subsequent detection utilised DRC-ICP-MS with calibration by standard additions and ID. The results were compared against total acid digestion with pneumatic nebulisation ICP-MS. Overall, good agreement was found demonstrating that a straightforward sample preparation approach can be applied for ETV-ICP-MS measurements.
The use of GC for speciation purposes of Hg and Sn is well known. Cavalheiro et al.39 considered the determination of MeHg, iHg, butyl tin and phenyl tin compounds in biological samples by comparing GC-MS and GC-ICP-MS. Using ID as the calibration approach helped to overcome issues from losses during the derivatisation stages. In general, both techniques compared well in terms of precision and recovery of CRMs. However, GC-ICP-MS had better LODs by a factor of approximately 9.
In the past year, a number of works have applied GF-AAS for food analysis. Sun et al.74 focussed on Se species in rice The inorganic and organic Se species were extracted using CPE with analysis by GF-AAS. An LOD of 0.08 μg L−1 and good precision were demonstrated, with confirmation of the method accuracy by comparison with ICP-MS. Silvestre and Nomura75 also analysed rice for Al, Cd and Pb with GF-AAS but applied a solid sampling approach. A Pd–Mg modifier was used to enable calibration with aqueous standards. With the optimised procedure, a number of commercially available rice samples were measured whilst the effects of washing and cooking were also investigated. Slurry sampling allowed de Andrade et al.62 to quantify Cd, Cr and Pb in honey with minimal sample pre-treatment. Nitric acid and H2O2 were used to create the slurry which was directly injected into the graphite furnace. Cadmium required the use of a modifier, namely Pd–Mg, and addition of fructose to the aqueous calibration standards. The LODs were 2.0, 9.4 and 5.4 ng g−1 for Cd, Cr and Pb respectively, with honey samples from Brazil containing <2.0–8 ng g−1 Cd, 83–94 ng g−1 Cr and 141–228 ng g−1 Pb. Moraes et al.76 presented a method to determine Hg in fish with GF-AAS following acid mineralisation. A combination of tungsten-carbide pyrolysis tubes and Cu(II) nitrate were used as modifiers for GF-AAS. The instrumental LOD and LOQ was 27 and 89 ng L−1 and accuracy was demonstrated through spiked samples and use of DORM-4 fish protein CRM. The method was applied to dourada, pacu and jaraqui fish from the Brazilian Amazon with concentrations ranging from 0.081 to 0.331 mg kg−1 Hg.
The determination of toxic elements in waters by GF-AAS was the subject of research for two works.60,77 Cacho et al.60 described the unique use of an electrochemical flow through cell for the on-line pre-concentration of Se in water samples. The cell contained a gold-plated porous carbon working electrode with a Pt auxiliary electrode and was connected to the GF-AAS system through a 6 port valve and sampling loop. The procedure had an LOD of 0.01 μg L−1 and accuracy was demonstrated using a number of CRMs and comparison against results by ICP-MS. It was also possible to determine SeIV or total Se if the sample was pre-treated with HCl and heated. Ajtony et al.77 developed a method for the measurement of As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Pb, and Se in various water samples (snow, tap and well). Simultaneous detection of As, Cd, Pb and Se was possible using end-capped graphite tubes whilst Cr and Cu required the use of graphite tubes with L'vov platforms. The influence of chemical modifiers and interferences from Cl− and SO42− were investigated. However, at high levels, the effect of Cl− and/or SO42− could not be overcome which could lead to falsely low results, particularly for Se. This, combined with the use of 2 types of graphite tubes, limited the benefits and usefulness as a ‘simultaneous’ method.
Cold vapour generation for the determination of Hg was combined with AAS with some novel advances. Chandio et al.55 described the use of an on-line pre-concentration procedure with a modified alumina adsorbent for the measurement of Hg in water and foodstuffs. Alumina was used as a cheaper alternative for SPE and was treated with ammonium lauryl sulfate and dithizone to improve adsorption characteristics. Hydrochloric acid was used as the eluent for Hg which was directly mixed with NaBH4 to generate the Hg vapour. With optimised conditions, the enrichment factor was 125, LOD was 0.12 ng mL−1 and recoveries between 97–99% were obtained from spiked samples and NIST SRM 1570a. Lemos et al.78 also reported an on-line pre-concentration approach for Hg CV-AAS. In this work, Amberlite XAD-4 was treated with 2-(2′-benzothiazolylazo)-p-cresol as the adsorbent. The LOD obtained with this method was 0.011 μg L−1 and was applied to human saliva samples (0.055–0.200 μg L−1), fish (0.043–0.361 μg g−1) and shellfish (0.075–0.397 μg g−1). A novel development by Peng et al.79 utilised gold nanoparticles to coat the surface of a quartz tube atomiser for Hg determination with AAS. The in-atomiser trapping was successfully demonstrated for spiked water samples and 2 matrix CRMs (GBW07601a and DORM-4), with an instrumental LOD of 0.01 ng mL−1.
The history, background and use of continuum source AAS were highlighted in a review by Welz et al.12 covering the past, present and future of the technique. The article included the development of the technique, which emerged over 150 years ago, the current state of the field with examples, the challenges that remain and the future direction. Çiftçi et al.51 presented the use of HR-CS-AAS for the determination of Al and Pb in water and beverages. A complex ligand was used to chelate Al and Pb, followed by selective absorption and pre-concentration using a polystyrene based substrate. The method was optimised and validated, achieving LODs of 0.32 μg L−1 Al and 0.24 μg L−1 Pb. Santos et al.80 applied HR-CS-AAS for the analysis of Ca, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Na and Zn in ‘baby leaf’ salad leaves. After acid digestion, the elemental content of the salad leaves was determined using both flame and electrothermal atomisation HR-CS-AAS, with accuracy checked using a CRM. The results showed that the main constituents were Fe, K and Ca, and LDA could discriminate between the different families of leaves.
The use of solid sampling ICP-OES was the subject of a report by Nischkauer et al.61 who applied ETV to investigate the uptake behaviour of Pd, Pt and Rh in Brassica Napus. Hydroponically grown plants were dosed with the 3 elements and subsequently dissected into roots, stems and leaves. Solid sampling ETV-ICP-OES was employed for analysis with quantification achieved using filter papers spotted with aqueous elemental standards and dried. This approach enabled Pt to be determined without the memory effects observed with solution-based standards due to the formation of Pt-carbide. The method was compared against traditional acid digested samples with good agreement obtained. However, the ETV approach used smaller quantities therefore enabling greater spatial resolution which could facilitate better improved understanding of PGE translocation in plants.
The challenge of implementing the new United States Pharmacopeia (USP) General Chapters 〈232〉 and 〈233〉 was highlighted by Stoving et al.82 A method for the analysis of a suite of elements (namely As, Cd, Cu, Cr, Fe, Hg, Ir, Mn, Mo, Ni, Os, Pb, Pd, Pt, Rh, Ru, V and Zn) in pharmaceutical products was described. A microwave assisted acid digestion was applied using a reverse aqua regia mixture (3:1 v/v HNO3–HCl). The LODs and LOQs obtained by ICP-OES were at least 10-fold lower than the limits set by the USP and spike recoveries were adequate for all elements except Os for which the recovery was 162% with an RSD of 13.7%. The authors attributed this to a memory effect and noted that the method required further development for Os. It was also reported that spectral interferences required visual inspection of peaks for Ir, Os, Pb, Pt and Rh. Both of these issues emphasised the difficulty of the new USP guidelines.
The use of alternative atomisation sources for OES was described in 2 works.83,84 Matusiewicz and Ślachciński83 reported a combined approach for MIP-OES employing USN and a multimode sample introduction system (MSIS) for the measurement of hydride-forming (As, Bi, Ge, Sb, Se, Sn), Hg vapour, and non-hydride-forming (Ba, Ca, Li, Mg, Sr) elements. The MSIS combines traditional pneumatic nebulisation and hydride/cold vapour generation in a specially designed cyclonic spray chamber which can be operated separately and in tandem within the same session. In this work, a USN was used prior to the MSIS to achieve high efficiency aerosol formation to enable the use of smaller sample quantities without affecting detection limits. The unique approach was assessed with 4 different biological and environmental CRMs. Zhang et al.84 described the application of solution cathode GD-AES to determine Cd, Cr, Hg and Pb. The addition of an ionic surfactant, namely cetyltrimethylammonium chloride (CTAC), to the electrolyte solution helped to reduce the background and improved precision. Additionally, the authors compared the addition of ionic (CTAC) and non-ionic (Triton X-45 and Triton X-100) surfactants to the sample solutions. For Cr, Hg and Pb, CTAC provided the greatest enhancement whereas Triton X-100 was optimal for Cd. The optimised methodology was demonstrated using biological and environmental CRMs.
In recent times, LIBS has been applied to a number of biological applications. Grolmusová et al.85 reported the use of LIBS as a screening tool for the detection of Wilson's disease. Liver tissues from confirmed Wilson's disease patients and a control group were analysed with LIBS equipped with a CCD camera and the data was interpreted in two ways. The first was considering the Cu/C ratio and the second was directly through the CCD images. It was demonstrated that LIBS could be used for this purpose as a quick and low-cost approach. Motto-Ros et al.86 applied LIBS analysis to kidney tissue slices from mice exposed to Gd nanoparticles. This enabled mapping of the Gd distribution within the tissues and achieved a resolution of 100 μm. Abdel-Salam and co-workers87 applied LIBS to evaluate the nutritional elements Ca, Fe, Mg and Na in human milk and infant formula. The work was only qualitative but it indicated that human milk contained higher levels than commercial products. Interestingly, the group also compared the CN and C2 emission bands in order to infer protein content which was similar between the two groups of samples.
Lee et al.90 employed PIXE and Rutherford backscattering spectroscopy to enhance the quality of information to be gained from ion-beam analyses. This work included comparing spectra produced with 3 MeV proton and 36 MeV carbon ion beams applied to 7 μm thick sections of brain tissue. Signal yields were greater with PIXE but the image quality was similar with both techniques. Interestingly, certain elements showed better contrast with protons while others were superior with the carbon ion beam. The results demonstrated the value of applying more than one approach to a problem. The hard X-ray microanalysis beam line from the Canadian synchrotron was used by Gherase et al.37 to determine the distribution of As in nail clippings. Calibration of the measurements, using the As K-alpha peak, was achieved by analysis of nail phantoms prepared in the same way as real samples. A 13 keV excitation was used with a 45 degree sample and 90 degree beam detection geometry. As was found in small spots of <1 mm2 in the nail.
A novel way of interpreting X-ray spectra was proposed by Frankær et al.91 Strontium-containing compounds have a role to play in the treatment of osteoporosis and, in the study reported by these workers, XAS, X-ray powder diffraction and EXAFS techniques provided localisation and compositional information for Sr in bone. Results were collected from bone samples of Sr-treated dogs and from Sr-doped calcium hydroxyapatite, Sr-soaked collagen and Sr3(PO4)2. The spectra from the bone samples were modelled by a linear combination of those from the in vitro prepared reference compounds. Application of this approach to this study by Frankær et al.91 is mentioned in Section 5.2.
Applications of XRF spectrometry to imaging are described in a separate Section 5.2, below.
Little new work relating to development of techniques for in vivo XRF spectrometry was seen in the last year.
Speciation studies with metal-containing anti-cancer agents are seen to be important in clarifying mechanisms of action and of toxicity. A new approach to investigating Pt speciation was developed by Martincic et al.92 Protein G- and DAEA-monolithic convective interaction media discs were assembled together in a column for conjoint LC. This methodology has been established in biochemical and immunological research for a number of years. We believe, however, it is a first for the technique appearing in this particular ASU review. With this application, both affinity and ion exchange mechanisms were exploited for separation of Pt species in human serum. With an elution buffer at pH 7.4, immunoglobulins were retained on the Protein G disc and, at the same time, unbound Pt was separated from albumin- and transferrin-bound Pt during passage through the DAEA disc. Then, with an acidic mobile phase, Pt associated with immunoglobulin was eluted. The Pt species were detected by post-column ID-ICP-MS. The authors claimed that this novel procedure was more rapid and simpler than the more usual SEC techniques. It was found that most of the Pt was bound to albumin but with carboplatin binding to protein occurred more slowly than was seen for cisplatin and oxaliplatin. A number of Ru-complexes with potential anti-cancer activity have been developed but none are yet in clinical use. To investigate possible metabolism, Aleksenko et al.93 studied the influence of cytoplasmic glutathione, ascorbic acid and citric acid on the speciation of Ru-transferrin adducts using CE-ICP-MS. Glutathione and ascorbic acid promoted release of Ru from the protein whereas the metal remained with the protein when exposed to citric acid.
For clinical investigations of As exposure and toxicity, total As concentrations may be misleading and it is necessary to separate the species typically found in urine and blood. To facilitate interpretation of results, Leese et al.29 determined reference values for AsIII, AsV MMA, DMA and AB in urine, corrected for creatinine concentrations. Specimens from 95 subjects who had no occupational exposure to As were analysed by anion exchange micro-column LC-ICP-MS. Analysis of the data using Bayesian statistics confirmed that consumption of shellfish and red wine had significant effects on the urinary levels of AB, DMA and MMA but that smoking had no influence on As speciation. These reference values helped in the interpretation of biological monitoring data for As exposure. Not limiting themselves to the traditional five As species, Liu et al.68 set about determining ten species and analysed various sample types including herbs and chicken meat. These workers used CE-ICP-MS to separate AC, 3-nitro-4-hydroxyphenylarsonic acid, o-arsanilic acid, p-ureidophenylarsonic acid, and 4-nitrophenylarsonic acid in addition to those determined by Leese et al.29 Conditions for the electrophoresis were optimised and a buffer of 12 mM NaH2PO4 and 8 mM HBO3, pH 9.2 with an applied voltage of +30 kV was used. The LODs were 0.9–3.0 ng g−1 As and the method was validated by analysis of TORT-2 and DORM-3 CRMs.
A further group of As compounds present in foods are the arsenolipids, comprising As-fatty acids and As-hydrocarbons. Amayo et al.94 analysed Capelin Oil by RP-HPLC-ICP-MS/ES-MS. Additional analysis of unidentified compounds by acetylation and thiolation, coupled with accurate mass spectrometry pointed to an additional class of arsenolipids, cationic trimethylarsenio fatty alcohols. Also, four As-hydrocarbons that had not been previously seen were discovered and characterised.
The relevance to human health of iAs in rice and products derived from rice has recently become recognised. Thus, a number of studies have been reported concerning both levels of exposure and methods for speciation (Section 7.1.1).
A sensitive procedure to separately measure concentrations of iHg, EtHg and MeHg in whole blood down to 30 pg g−1 was reported by Rahman et al.95 Blood samples were solubilised with 2 M HNO3 and equilibrated with enriched 199Hg2+, Et201Hg+ and Me200Hg+ using microwave heating. The spiked samples were reacted with 1% sodium tetrapropyl borate and the propylated Hg species adsorbed onto a carboxymethylsiloxane – SPME fibre. The adsorbed species were thermally desorbed and Hg determined using GC-ICP-MS. The authors reported the method to be sufficiently sensitive to determine all three species at levels of 30 pg g−1. Method validation was assessed by analysing bovine blood SRM 966 Level 2 and by mass balance comparison of the sum of the measured values for individual species with total Hg determined by ID-ICP-MS using EPA protocol 3052. Meng et al.96 also investigated Hg speciation, their interest being the species in rice and the concentrations of iHg and MeHg in hull, bran and white rice. The majority of iHg was located in hull and bran whereas the more toxic MeHg was in the edible white rice Based on XANES data, it was suggested that iHg in bran is primarily bound to cysteine in phytochelatins and is largely immobile. The MeHg in bran is also bound to cysteine in proteins. However, this MeHg–cysteine is actively transported to the endosperm during seed ripening, which has implications for human health when rice is consumed from polluted areas (especially evident throughout Asia).
Iodine status in humans is normally assessed by measurement of the thyroid hormones but there may be situations in which additional information could be of use. Han et al.97 therefore developed a method using RP-LC-ICP-MS that separated and quantified I−, IO3−, mono-iodotyrosine, di-iodotyrosine, triiodo- and reverse tri-iodothyronine and thyroxine in urine, within 7 minutes. Tetrabutylammonium hydroxide was used as the ion-pair reagent and the eluent was NH4Cl with L-phenylalanine or deoxycholic acid. Recoveries of the seven species were 93–106% and the LODs were 0.046–0.094 μg L−1.
As discussed in Section 7.1.4, Nori seaweed is an exceptional dietary source of I, being rich in this element. Material from Galicia in Spain was found to contain 68 μg g−1 I of which 25% was water soluble I−. Romaris-Hortas et al.98 investigated the non-water soluble, protein bound species by extracting with NaOH, SDS and Triton X-100. Intact proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE and five I-containing proteins were located by LA-ICP-MS.
After many years in which Se featured prominently in the reports of metallomics and speciation, there is very little novel work from this review period. Jeong et al.99 developed an elaborate protocol for Se speciation in serum and urine. The work involved affinity column HPLC for separation of selenoproteins and RP-HPLC for speciation of iSe and selenoamino acids. Post-column ID (78Se) was employed for quantification with octopole ICP-MS, using H as the reaction gas. This procedure identified GPx, selenoprotein P and selenoalbumin in serum at (Se) concentrations of 22.8 ± 3.4, 45.2 ± 1.7 and 16.1 ± 2.2 ng g−1, respectively. Analysis of the protein by enzymatic hydrolysis showed SeCys was the main amino acid in all proteins while SeMet was found only in selenoalbumin. Urine contained SeIV, SeVI and SeCys.
This issue of calibration for LA-ICP-MS applications remains a challenge. Several workers have attempted to overcome this101–103 with applications to biological and plant samples. Reifschneider and co-workers101 used a cold-curing glycol methacrylate resin to generate matrix-matched Pt calibration standards. The Pt-spiked resin was sliced and digested by microwave-assisted dissolution for total Pt determination by ICP-MS. The calibration standards were then used to quantify the distribution of Pt in tissues of mice exposed to cisplatin, achieving good LODs (8 μg kg−1). Wilson's disease, a disorder affecting the metabolism of Cu, was the subject of a study by Pornwilard et al.102 using quantitative LA-ICP-MS. The group determined Cu, Fe, Mn and Zn in mouse liver slices of control and diseased animals. Quantification was achieved with characterised spiked murine brain tissue standards. Significantly increased levels of Cu, Fe and Zn were observed in Wilson's-variant samples compared with the control group. Whilst the use of quantum dots (QD) for a wide variety of diagnostic, therapeutic and optical applications is very promising, concerns about the toxicity were examined by Hsieh et al.103 with LA-ICP-MS. Mouse lung slices (controls and exposed) were used to identify the location of CdSe QDs to specifically within the alveoli in the upper part of the lungs. Furthermore, traditional staining techniques indicated an immune response by the presence of lymphocytes and increased expression of metallothionein, which also linked to increased levels of Cu and Zn. The quantitative imaging of Cd using a standard additions approach was demonstrated, however; a number of assumptions were used and spatial resolution was lost, limiting its usefulness.
A number of groups have applied imaging techniques for food analysis. Arsenic in rice remains a hot topic (refer to Section 7.1.3) but Choi et al.104 combined total As determination in white and brown rice with imaging by fs-LA-ICP-MS of single rice grains. Overall, white rice contained lower As concentrations than in brown rice and the total As content decreased with increasing degrees of milling. This was confirmed with As imaging of the rice grain cross section showing significantly higher levels on the outer surface. Another application of LA-ICP-MS for foods was described by Romaris-Hortas et al.,98 but in combination with speciation analysis for identification of I-containing proteins in edible seaweed. The work was specifically focussed on the water insoluble components of the seaweed and utilised SDS-PAGE for protein separation with LA applied to identify the bands containing I. Five regions were detected which correlated to molecular masses of 10, 20, 27, 40 and 110 kDa. The results of an interesting study on the exposure and uptake rates of Hg in grizzly bears was presented by Noel and co-workers.105 The ingestion rate of Hg was estimated using captive bears and applied to two wild populations by determining Hg along hair strands with LA-ICP-MS. This ascertained temporal effects in relation to diet, as coastal and inland regions were compared. A peak in Hg levels for coastal bears correlated to the ingestion of salmon during the migration season. The data also suggested the Hg concentrations were above the limit for neurochemical effects proposed for polar bears, which is an additional conservation concern for grizzly bears who already face challenges from habitat loss.
The use of qualitative elemental mapping for biological studies was demonstrated as a beneficial approach in two papers.86,106 The microorganism Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) was used to investigate the biological mechanisms of Mn activity.106 A simple sample preparation procedure was described and the distribution of Mn was determined by LA-ICP-MS in different strains of C. elegans with mutations of the DJ1 gene which is associated with Parkinson's disease and linked to oxidative stress regulation. The results confirmed that DJ1 played a significant role in the behaviour of Mn. Laser induced breakdown spectroscopy was applied to the imaging of mouse kidney slices following intravenous injection of Gd-nanoparticles.86 In addition to Gd, other elements were also determined, namely Ca, Fe and Si. The approach had a resolution of 100 μm which does not match that possible with LA but could still be useful in combination with classical techniques due to minimal sample preparation without the need of labels or staining.
The combination of LA-ICP-MS with other analytical techniques for imaging purposes has shown development. Herdering et al.107 described the novel online combination of LA-ICP-MS and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-MS for simultaneous spatially-resolved speciation analysis. The coupling of both MS instruments was achieved with a flow splitter and differing tubing lengths. For the atmospheric pressure chemical ionization-MS, N2 was added to the Ar argon carrier gas from the LA system and a custom made inlet enabled the introduction of gaseous samples rather than liquids under standard conditions. The combined approach was demonstrated with imaging of eosin stained kidney slices of mice exposed to cisplatin and with human lymph nodes stained with haematoxylin and eosin (H&E). The results showed excellent correlation with traditional visualisation techniques and, for H&E in particular, it added extra resolution due to overlap of the haematoxylin (blue) and eosin (red) regions. The approach demonstrated significant potential. The use of TOF-SIMS for imaging applications was applied by Henss and co-workers72 in order to quantify Ca in bone cross-sections. In-house prepared collagen and mineralised hydroxyapatite standards were characterised by XRD and XPS and used for calibration with TOF-SIMS. The results demonstrated enhanced resolution for Ca and collagen with TOF-SIMS compared with XPS, which could be beneficial for bone research e.g. osteoporosis. Blaske et al.108 investigated the elemental distribution of metal prostheses coated with Ag nanoparticles using both μXRF spectrometry and LA-ICP-MS. The two approaches provided complementary information, with μXRF spectrometry providing rapid and non-destructive data regarding the major elemental constituents of the implant, bone and soft tissue (Ca, P, S, Ti and V). Laser ablation ICP-MS, with its superior detection capabilities, was able to offer greater detail on the distribution of Ag, Al and Zr along with displacement of Ti and V from the prosthesis into the soft tissue.
Within the timeframe of this review period, an increase in the number of publications utilising X-ray techniques for imaging was observed in comparison to previous years. In particular, the analysis of bone was the subject of several works.91,109,110 Pemmer and co-workers109 studied cortical and trabecular bone slices after embedding in polymethylmethacrylate for Pb, Sr and Zn. Quantitative backscattered electron imaging with SEM was used to identify regions of interest followed by analysis with SR-μXRF spectrometry. Normalisation of the signals was required in order to compare between different samples and measurement sessions, which was achieved using Ca as it was determined by both techniques. The results indicated that the elements were not evenly distributed in the various bone structures and that different uptake mechanisms may apply for each of the elements investigated. The use of XAS to image the different bone components following administration of Sr malonate, a drug for the treatment of osteoporosis was described by Frankær et al.91 (see Section 5.4.15). Synchrotron rapid scanning XRF spectrometry was used to investigate differences in pathological and normal bone morphology of extant and extinct vertebrates.110 Images of Ca, Cu, Fe, P, REEs and Zn provided information about bone healing and remodelling which was not achievable with traditional histological analysis.
Other biological applications of X-ray techniques include the work of Ugarte et al.111 who applied PIXE to investigate the trace element distribution in mammalian cornea and retina. The profile of elements such as Cu, Fe, and Zn, in these tissues were presented and additional information from staining indicated that Zn was not associated with metallothioneins. Gherase and co-workers37 used SR-μXRF to examine As in the cross sections of finger and toe nail clippings. Nail phantoms were produced to quantify the As content in addition to imaging. It was found that regions with high As levels (>1 μg g−1) were principally within the ventral and dorsal layers of the nail. In a study similar to that of Choi et al.,104 who applied fs-LA-ICP-MS to the imaging of As in rice, Meng et al.96 used SR-μXRF spectrometry and XANES to determine the speciation of Hg in rice from a contaminated region of China. The hull, bran, and white rice were measured, with the results showing that approximately 78% of iHg was removed during processing. However, around 80% of MeHg remained in the rice grain which was bound to cysteine hence increasing the mobility of Hg. The authors postulated that Hg contamination of rice is an increasing problem which requires further research and understanding.
Most of the work relating to metal-on-metal hip prostheses has concerned the concentrations of Co and Cr in biological specimens. However, in patients with failed total hip replacement, concentrations in blood or serum are not as high as in those with failed resurfacing. Examination of removed devices suggests that there are problems associated with the titanium alloy stem that goes into the femoral bone. For this reason methods are developed to measure Ti concentrations in blood and serum. Determination of Ti by Q-ICP-MS is complicated by isobaric interferences from the relatively huge concentrations of Ca isotopes. To determine concentrations in specimens from normal subjects as well as from patients, Balcaen et al.34 used ICP-MS/MS. The effectiveness of O2 and NH3/He as collision cell reaction gases, to overcome spectral interferences on Ti, was investigated. It was observed that O2 was ineffective as a reaction gas but that conversion of Ti+ ions into Ti(NH3)6 cluster ions provided an interference-free method with an instrumental LOD of 3 ng L−1. Serum concentrations were less than 1 and 2–6 μg L−1 in normal subjects and patients with implants, respectively. Silver-coated prostheses reduce rates of infection compared with uncoated metal devices. Blaske et al.108 were interested in the impact of nanosilver-coating on the surrounding tissues following implantation. Using LA-ICP-MS, the distribution of Ag, Ti and V from an implant was compared with μXRF visualisation for Ca and P (in hard tissues) and with S (in soft tissues). Metal displacement from the implant into surrounding bone tissue occured for Ag, Al, Ti, V and Zr. The high concentrations of Al and Zr present at the surface of the implant were suggested to be as residues from the pre-operative treatment of the device.
• non-menstruating women had heavier and lighter isotopic compositions for Cu and Fe, respectively, than menstruating women.
• menstruation had no effect on the Zn isotopic composition.
• non-menstruating women showed an isotopic signature for Cu and Fe that was identical to that of the male reference population and there was no difference between results for the two groups.
• the menopausal women had a lighter Zn isotopic composition compared with those using the IUD, an observation that may be due to a hormonal effect.
As part of this study, the effect of age on the isotopic composition of Cu, Fe and Zn in whole blood was also investigated. However, contrary to the results from Jaouen et al.,115 no age effect for these three elements was found. In neither of these papers do the authors suggest mechanisms that would explain the dichotomy of accumulation of light elements on the one hand and heavy ones on the other.
Well validated ICP-MS methodologies for the measurement of trace elements were presented for blood and urine samples for biomonitoring purposes,117 and for urine.27,64 These reports also include valuable data on reference values. Yu et al.20 from the NIST proposed an ID-SF-ICP-MS method as an alternative to the established ID-TIMS reference procedure for measuring concentrations of Ca, K, Mg and Na in serum. Results for the analysis of SRM 956c matched the certified concentration for both concentrations and uncertainties.
Whilst not exactly a fluid, a sample type that is of growing interest, particularly for occupational biomonitoring and respiratory research, is exhaled breath. The breath can be cooled to give a liquid sample, a condensate, which contains dissolved materials and particulates. Barreiros et al.118 compared ICP-MS and TXRF for the analysis of exhaled breath condensate samples, determining precision, trueness and measurement uncertainty for Cd, Cu, K, Mn, Pb and Sr. Specimens were collected from lead processing workers exposed to different levels of contaminants and the results obtained by ICP-MS allowed good discrimination among the groups. The specific situation of welders exposed to Cd and Mn was investigated by Bredberg et al.119 whose approach was to isolate and analyse particulate material from the exhaled breath. Samples were collected from a group of volunteers before, five minutes and 24 h after a 2 h period of exposure to welding fumes. Little or no Cd and Mn was determined in the pre-test specimens. Of the nine subjects only four produced particulates with measurable amounts of these metals and the concentrations were very varied increasing from <LOD to 82–84 pg L−1 for Mn and from 20–86 to 2600 pg L−1 for Fe. The authors considered this approach had potential as a non-invasive method for monitoring occupational exposures to a range of toxic elements but the enormous range of concentrations would suggest that this sample type is not particularly useful.
In a study of lung physiology in patients with cystic fibrosis and non-cystic fibrosis bronchiectasis, Smith et al.120 measured metal ion concentrations in sputum. Compared with samples from apparently healthy controls, increased concentrations of Ca, Fe, Mg and Zn were found with significant correlation between markers of inflammation and results for Mg, Fe and Zn. Patients with severe lung disease also had high concentrations of Mo and it was proposed that this metal may serve as a biomarker for severe cystic fibrosis airways disease.
A situation that parallels occupational or environmental exposure to atmospheric pollution is pulmonary delivery of drugs carried by CdSe quantum dots (QDs). Using a mouse inhalation model, Hsieh et al.103 used LA-ICP-MS to look at lung slice samples. It was found that Cd and Se were co-localised in the bronchiolar region along with high concentrations of Cu. Tissue staining demonstrated accumulation of lymphocytes at the same location. The results suggested that there was no degradation of the QDs and that their inhalation triggers an inflammatory response.
Concentrations of metals within the eye are rarely determined but in a preliminary investigation of 14 patients with cataracts the lens, removed during surgery, together with some aqueous humour, were taken for analysis by XRF spectrometry.122 Chromium and Ni were found in both sample types, Ba only in lens with Ni only in aqueous humour. Whether these results have any clinical significance remains to be seen. The distribution of Ca, Cu, Fe and Zn in cornea and retina of rats was investigated by Ugarte et al.111 in a second study. Concentrations in different components of these structures were reported. Interestingly, distributions of Zn and metallothionein were not co-incident.
Pemmer et al.109 examined samples of femoral neck and head bone from healthy subjects and patients with osteoporosis. The techniques of SR-μXRF and quantitative backscattered electron imaging were used to determine the concentrations and location of trace elements. The variations in spatial distribution of Ca, Pb, Sr and Zn were inferred to indicate different mechanisms of accumulation.
Ichou and colleagues35 used AAS to quantitatively determine Al in an investigation of Al concentrations in 26 commercial parenteral nutrition compounds and 56 hospital-prepared parenteral mixtures. They observed that 50% of the commercial preparations and all of the hospital-prepared mixtures had Al concentrations in excess of the US FDA maximum allowable concentration of 25 μg L−1. They estimated that two thirds of patients administered parenteral nutrition in the hospitals studied had a daily Al intake significantly above the recommended level (2 μg per kg per day). They considered further guidance was necessary on acceptable levels of Al in parenteral nutritional products. Work by Cabrera-Vique and Mesias125 who investigated the dietary intake of Al in two distinct populations (families and university students), and of Chuchu et al.126 who determined the Al content of 30 infant formula feeds (ready-to-drink milk and milk-powder products) is discussed in Sections 7.1.1 and 7.1.2, respectively.
The environmental As crisis in Bangladesh and other regions of India, highlighted in our previous reviews, continues to be investigated and reported on. Kalman et al.128 determined As species in urine samples collected from children chronically exposed to As in drinking water from an As contaminated region of Bangladesh. The trivalent species of MMA is particularly toxic compared to the pentavalent form. Therefore, care was taken to use sample collection, storage and preparation methods that conserved As species, in particular MMAIII. They reported that efforts to preserve MMAIII and MMAV using complexing agents were not entirely successful. Of the 643 samples stored for more than three months before analysis, MMA was only detected in 41 samples and in only two of these was the level in excess of 1 μg L−1. They concluded that MMA was not suitable as a biomarker of As exposure in epidemiological studies.
Leffers et al.129,130 noted that risks to human health from exposure to arsenosugars is still unclear. To help address this, they examined the intestinal availability and transfer of different arsenosugar metabolites using LC-Q-ICP-MS. They reported that thio-DMA was readily transported across the intestinal barrier and was metabolised to its oxygen analogue DMA. It also caused barrier leakage in a similar manner to inorganic AsIII. They concluded that arsenosugar intake needs to be considered when assessing risks to health arising from dietary As exposure.
Baghban et al.57 used TiO2 nanoparticles modified with alizarin red S for the solid-phase extraction of Cd2+ and Pb2+ from biological solutions followed by quantitative determination using FAAS. The researchers established optimised values for extraction pH, eluent concentration and both sample and eluent flow rates. They reported an enrichment factor of 100 for a 200 mL initial sample volume, giving LODs of 0.11 ng L−1 and 0.3 ng L−1 for Cd and Pb respectively. Their method was validated by analysing water SRM 1643e and was used to determine both Cd and Pb in a range of water and biological samples.
Christopher and Thompson18 quantitatively determined Cd in SRM 3280 Multivitamin/Multi-element tablets using both collision cell Q-ICP-MS and SF-ICP-MS instrumentation with ID. Cadmium was separated from the interfering elements Mo and Sn, both present at mg kg−1 levels in the tablet matrix, by a combination of precipitation and solid-phase extraction procedures, which allowed quantitative determination of 111Cd:113Cd and 111Cd:114Cd isotope ratios.
Two groups, one in Brazil and one in Korea, reported studies on I status in infants by monitoring urinary I excretion. The Brazilian group132 investigated urinary I excretion and the relationship with maternal milk I concentration in a group of 33 infants aged less than 6 months. Iodine in urine and maternal milk was quantitatively determined using ICP-MS. Levels of I in kitchen salt from the participating households were also determined by titration. The median value for urine I was 253 μg L−1 and the mean concentration of I in maternal milk was 206 μg L−1. A positive correlation between urinary I excretion and maternal milk I concentration was reported. The authors concluded that the elevated urinary I excretion was due to high I concentrations in maternal milk which, in turn, were due to high I levels in the salt. They recommended that salt I be reduced.
The Korean group investigated I status in a group of pre-school children by measuring urinary I excretion. Samples were collected from 611 healthy children aged between two and seven years. Urine I was quantitatively determined using ICP-MS. A median urine I concentration of 438.5 μg L−1 was reported. The authors estimated that two thirds of the children had excessive I intake compared with less than 55 having insufficient intake. They argued for preventive measures for excessive intake to be introduced.
The determination of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) is an important biomarker for a number of clinical conditions and for forensic diagnoses. Ordonez et al.135 highlighted the fact that CDT is not a singular molecular entity but a group of transferrin species and that the various immunological methods for CDT determination requires a CRM as a universal calibrator for method harmonisation. To address this, the researchers developed a sensitive method for the separation and quantitative determination of transferrin sialoproteins in human serum using IC-ID-ICP-MS. The method was used to determine concentrations of individual transferrin sialoforms in NIST CRM 909c human serum.
Motto-Ros et al.86 investigated the use of LIBS for mapping the intracellular localisation of Gd in mouse kidney slices, following IV injection of a suspension of Gd nanoparticles. Satisfactory mapping with a resolution of 100 μm was achieved. An approach for quantitative determination of Gd was also reported which gave results in good agreement with those obtained using ICP-OES.
The Amazon is often romantically thought of as one of the world's last wildernesses. It was interesting, therefore, to see the results of a study to establish a reference value for blood Pb in a population of blood donors from Rio Branco, the capital city of Acre in the Western Brazilian Amazon. Blood samples were collected from 1196 donors during 2010–2011 and the concentration of Pb determined using ICP-MS. Upper reference limits, 95th percentile values, were reported to be 109 μg L−1 for men and 70.7 μg L−1 for women. The authors noted that these were higher than those reported for other adult populations and argued that exposure of this population to local sources of Pb needs to be addressed.
Richardson et al.67 developed a simple and robust method for the quantitative determination of Mn in whole blood and plasma using ICP-MS without the use of collision-cell technology. Blood and plasma samples were diluted with a solution containing 0.005% Triton X-100, 0.2% butan-1-ol, 0.2% propan-2-ol, 1% HNO3, containing Ga as an internal standard and centrifuged to remove cell debris. Manganese was measured at mass 55 using aqueous calibration standards. Polyatomic interference from FeH was overcome by modifying the geometry of the skimmer cones. The method was validated by analysing a series of external quality assessment scheme samples.
Ten years ago we noted the ‘bravery’ of researchers who determined levels of Hg in tissues from aligators captured in the Florida everglades. In this review, we must draw attention to similar ‘bravery’ shown by the Canadian research group who determined the concentrations of Hg in hair from wild grizzly bears.105 Joking aside, the researchers used LA-ICP-MS to detect temporal changes of Hg in samples collected from both captive and wild bears. By feeding the captive bears a controlled diet containing known Hg levels, the group generated data that helped predict Hg ingestion rates in the wild animal population. They reported that 70% of the bears studied had Hg levels exceeding that identified as being the neurochemical effect level in polar bears.
The technique of conjoint LC, was applied by Martincic et al.92 to achieve 2D separation of Pt species in human serum. Details of the methodology are given in Section 5.1 and the method was used to investigate the interaction kinetics of Pt-based therapeutic agents with serum proteins. Platinum was preferentially bound to albumin with less than 13% being associated with IgG and transferrin.
Much of the developmental work on XRF-CT for biomedical imaging has focused on K-shell X-rays, but little has been reported on the potential of L-shell XRF imaging. Bazalova et al.139 reported studies on Monte-Carlo simulations of L-shell XRF-CT imaging of cisplatin in small-animal imaging phantoms. The phantoms contained a series of ‘objects’ of 0.6 to 2.7 mm diameter having Pt concentrations between 10 and 250 μg mL−1 and placed at different depths within the phantoms. By including excitation and fluorescence beam attenuation correction, the authors reported that L-shell XRF-CT was capable of providing accurate information on cisplatin distribution in biological tissues.
Tipple et al.36 investigated the merit of hair Sr isotope ratio measurements for monitoring dietary and environmental sources of exposure. They highlighted once again the problem of differentiating surface bound element, representing external contamination, from that incorporated into the hair structure following ingestion. They applied a series of increasingly aggressive washing procedures to hair samples and at each stage quantitatively determined the Sr isotope ratios in the hair and leachate using MC-ICP-MS. They observed that Sr isotope ratios varied as a function of the aggressiveness of the washing treatment and considered that the ratios obtained for hair and leachate from the most aggressive treatment reflected the isotope ratios for the internal and external Sr signatures respectively. They considered this approach was valid for using hair specimens for geospatial studies.
Other work reported in the last year generally referred to methods of analysis rather than presenting new data. Christopher et al.18 used ID-ICP-MS to determine the concentration of Cd in the SRM 3280 Multivitamin/Multielement Tablets. The method required precipitation and SPE steps to eliminate polyatomic interferences from MoO+ and MoOH+. In order to separately measure concentrations of CrIII and CrVI avoiding any inter-species conversion, Martone et al.144 used the EPA method 3060A to extract CrVI followed by EPA method 3052 to separate CrIII from the residue. Ion-exchange chromatography-ID-ICP-MS was then used to measure the Cr concentrations. The method was applied to analysis of commercial supplements and the CrVI contents were from below the LOD to 16% of the total Cr concentrations. As reported in previous Updates, the US Pharmacopeia proposes to introduce limit values for elemental impurities in pharmaceuticals. Associated with this are the analytical requirements for ICP-AES and ICP-MS methods used for measurements. An ICP-AES method for the analysis of tablets was reported by Stoving et al.82 which provided the necessary LODs, repeatability, and recovery results.
Element | Matrix | Technique | Sample treatment/comments | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Al | Cola, fruit juices and water | HR-CS-AAS | Samples were prepared using SPE by chelating the analyte with ({4-51 amino}-1H-pyrazol-4-yl) diazenyl benzoic acid in aqueous solution followed by absorption onto polystyrene-graft-ethyl methacrylate copolymer resin and elution with HCl. The LOD for Al was 0.32 μg L−1 | 51 |
Al | Infant formulas | ETAAS | Samples (30 ready to drink milk and milk powders) were treated with HNO3 and H2O2 and subjected to microwave digestion. It was reported that Al was found in all milk products tested in the range 100 to 430 μg L−1. Certain soya based milk samples contained as much as 700 μg L−1 Al | 126 |
Al | Rice (Brazil) | ETAAS | Determination of Al, Cd and Pb in rice using a solid sampling method. Samples (17) were treated with Pd/Mg chemical modifier under optimised heating programme conditions. Calibration was achieved using aqueous standards. The LOD value for Al was reported as 114.0 μg kg−1 | 75 |
Al | Total diets (Spain) | ETAAS | The dietary intakes of Al in two population groups in southern Spain was estimated over a 7 day period. Samples were prepared using acid digestion prior to analysis. The mean Al intake for each group was 2.93 and 1.01 mg per day with a range of 0.12 to 10.00 mg per day | 125 |
As | Baby formulas | FI-HG-AAS, ETAAS | Five different extraction procedures (acetic acid, EDTA, NaOH, MeOH/H2O, acetonitrile) were evaluated. The extracts were subjected to microwave assisted digestion with HNO3, prior to determination as total As. The highest recovery (88%) was achieved for the 5 M NaOH extract | 175 |
As | Codfish and oyster candidate CRM | ID-LC-MS-MS | Quantification of AB using a tandem mass spectrometer with an electrospray interface. A certified As value of 6.60 mg kg−1 ± 0.31 mg kg−1 (n = 12) for the CRM was reported | 73 |
As | Chicken meat and herbal plants; lobster hepatopancreas (NRCC TORT-2) and fish protein (NRCC DORM 3) CRMs | ICP-MS | On-line CE with a novel interface was used for separation of a range of inorganic (2) and organic As species (8) prior to detection. The LODs for As obtained were in the range 0.9 to 3.0 ng g−1. The method was tested using the CRMs listed opposite | 68 |
As | Drinking water | ETAAS | An SPE method using an Empore SDB-XD disc (top), an activated carbon disc and a Cation-SR disc loaded with Zr and Ca in a three layer stack was developed for the separation of DPAA, phenylarsonic acid, and iAs using specific elution conditions. An LOD of 0.13 μg As L−1 was reported using a 200 mL sample | 35, 58 |
As | Mushrooms (Xerocomus badius) | HG-AAS | Two HPLC based separation systems were evaluated for the speciation and coupled detection of AsIII, AsV and DMA. High levels of all three species (up to 27.1, 40.5 and 88.3 mg kg−1 for AsIII, AsV and DMA respectively) were found in samples from certain forest locations in Poland while elsewhere levels contained <0.5 mg kg−1 | 156 |
As | Rice | HG-AFS | Samples were slurried in HNO3 and subjected to ultrasound for 30 min then treated with HCl, KI and ascorbic acid prior to HG. The LOD for As was given as 1.1 ng g−1. Results were reported in the range 0.12 to 0.47 μg g−1 for supermarket rice samples | 88 |
As | Rice (Australia) | HPLC-ICP-MS | Samples were extracted using HNO3 and iAs, DMA and MMA separated and determined in common rice. The results obtained for total As were in the range 0.006 to 0.45 μg g−1 (n = 47). Most As was present in the inorganic form with some DMA found in all samples. Results were verified using XANES | 155 |
As | Rice (Denmark) | HG-AAS | All iAs was oxidised to AsV by treatment with HNO3 and H2O2. A strong anion exchange SPE cartridge was used to separate iAs selectively prior to detection. The LOD for the method was 0.02 mg kg−1 and recoveries were given in the range 101–106% for spiked rice samples. The As content of 36 retail rice samples were reported to be between 0.03 and 0.60 mg kg−1 | 151 |
As | Rice; rice flours (NIST SRM 1568a and ERM BC211) | HG-AFS | The As was extracted from rice using microwave assisted digestion in HNO3/H2O2 then oxidised to AsV which was then separated from organic forms via silica-based strong anion SPE. Validation was performed using SRMs | 152 |
As | Total diet (Hong Kong) | HG-ICP-MS | Total diet samples (600) were subdivided into 15 food groups and total As and iAs contents determined. The LOD reported was 3 μg As kg−1. The highest ratio of iAs to total As was found in vegetable produce | 146 |
As | Total diet (Japan) | HG-ICP-MS | A study of iAs content in 19 food composites representative of the Japanese diet. Samples were extracted using synthetic gastric juice prior to LC separation and high efficiency photo oxidation HG | 145 |
Br | Drinking waters | HPLC-ICP-MS | Comparison of ICP-MS instrument systems for the low pressure LC separation and determination of BrO3− (as Br). The time for the LC separation was 13 min. The LOQ reported was 0.2 μg BrO3− L−1. The median BrO3− content of tap water (80 samples) found was 5 μg L−1 | 176 |
Cd | Drinking water and alcoholic beverages | FAAS | Homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction of CdII as DDC complex, using with a perfluorooctanoate anion by digestion of the complex with HNO3. A preconcentration factor of between 10- and 50-fold was reported | 49 |
Cd | Fish, oyster and shrimp samples; lake superior fish tissue (NIST SRM 1946); mussel tissue (NIES-6 CRM, Japan) and oyster tissue (NIST SRM 1566) | FAAS | Use of dipyridyl-functionalized graphene nano-sheets as novel SPE sorbent for separation and preconcentration of Cd ions. The LOD for the method was 0.19 ng Cd mL−1, the RSD was 1.6%, and a 99.1% recovery of Cd was achieved. The method was verified using SRMs | 52 |
Cd | Honey | ETAAS | Samples were slurried in HNO3 and H2O2 and introduced to pyrolytic graphite atomiser tubes. A Pd/Mg matrix modifier was added prior to the determination of Cd only. Aqueous standards were used for calibration with fructose added for Cd measurements. The LOQ for Cd was reported as 2.0 ng g−1 | 62 |
Cd | Multivitamin tablets (NIST SRM 3280) | ICP-MS | The Cd was separated from interfering sample matrix elements (Mo and Sn) using precipitation and SPE protocols. This permitted an ID approach to the measurement of 111Cd:113Cd and 111Cd:114Cd isotope ratios using collision cell quadrupole and sector field instruments | 18 |
Cd | Rice (Brazil) | ETAAS | See Al, ref. 75. The LOD value for Cd was reported as 3.0 μg kg−1 | 75 |
Cd | Rice grain (Japanese reference materials) | XRF | RMs were prepared by treating base rice grain with methanol containing a quantity of Cd, which was heated and then cooled. The Cd-containing rice was then packed into a polyethylene cup covered with a thin (6 μm) polypropylene film, prior to analysis. The LOD of the method was 0.13 mg kg−1 and XRF response was linear in the range 0.50–9.8 mg kg−1. The Cd content of the materials was verified using AAS | 22 |
Cr | Dietary supplements | ID-MS | Investigation of Cr speciation using EPA methods and protocols for extraction (3060A), digestion (3052) and measurement (6800), with ion exchange chromatographic separation. Hexavalent Cr was found in off-the-shelf dietary supplements at levels up to 122.4 μg g−1 | 144 |
Cr | Foodstuffs; Korean CRMs rice (08-01-001), oyster (108-04-001) and water dropwart (108-05-001) | ICP-MS | The determination of Cr in 30 food items from supermarkets was carried out using an instrument fitted with a collision reaction cell to remove spectral interference on Cr. The method was assessed using Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (KRISS) CRMs | 66 |
Cr | Honey | ETAAS | See Cd, ref. 62. The LOQ for Cr was reported as 9.4 ng g−1 | 62 |
Cu | Bottled water | FAAS | A DLLME method was described for the 70-fold preconcentration of CuII using ethanol and chloroform as disperser and extraction solvents. The LOD for CuII was given as 0.95 μg L−1 and the RSD was 1.9%. The method was verified using NRCC-SLRS-4 CRM (river water) | 48 |
Cu | Chocolate | ICP-OES | Samples (22) were prepared using a hot ashing procedure. The Cu content was reported to be in the range 1.85 to 16.50 μg g−1. A linear correlation was found between Cu level and cocoa content | 160 |
Hg | Bass, mullet, shrimp and mussels | CV-AAS | A method based on SPE using an Amberlite XAD-4 sorbent functionalised with 2-(2′-benzothiazolylazo)-p-cresol for preconcentration of Hg. The LOD in the solid sample was 0.011 μg g−1 | 78 |
Hg | Dietary supplements (ayurvedic); Ephedra sinica (NIST 3240) tomato leaves (NIST 1573a) and dogfish liver (NRCC DOLT3) SRMs | CV-AAS, ICP-MS | Comparison of a direct sampling Hg trap and vapour generation method and a digestion method with detection using ICP-MS. The Hg content of dietary supplements was given in the range 0.002 to 56 μg g−1 with a LOQ of 5 ng. Average mercury recoveries were close to 100%. The method was validated using the SRMs listed opposite | 177 |
Hg | Fish muscle (Brazilian Amazon) | ETAAS | Cu(NO3)2 was added to acid digested samples as a chemical modifier. Solutions were analysed using sodium tungstate as a permanent modifier. The method allowed the stabilisation of Hg to 1600 °C. An LOD of 0.014 mg kg−1 and LOQ of 0.047 mg kg−1 were reported | 76 |
Hg | Fish protein (NRCC CRM DORM 4) | FI-HG-AAS | A gold nanoparticle coating was applied to the inner walls of an electrically heated quartz tube atomiser to trap Hg vapour. The analyte was desorbed by increasing the atomiser operating temperature. An LOD of 0.01 μg L−1 was achieved using a 5.0 mL sample. The RSD of the method was typically 4% | 79 |
Hg | Fish RM (Brazil) | FIA-CV-AAS, ID-ICP-MS | The preparation and certification of a RM for total Hg and MeHg in fish were described. The material was reported to contain total Hg of 0.271 ± 0.059 μg g−1 and MeHg of 0.245 ± 0.053 μg g−1 | 19 |
Hg | Waters, tea, vegetables, table salt | CV-AAS | Use of Fe3O4 magnetic nanoparticles as solid phase sorbent for extraction and preconcentration of Hg. The eluent used was HCl–thiourea. The method LOD was given as 0.05 ng mL−1 and a preconcentration factor of up to 250 was achieved | 54 |
I | Milk powder (BCR-151 CRM) | ICP-MS | Samples (500 mg) were prepared by high pressure digestion in HNO3/H2O2 followed by cold oxidation with Na2S2O8 and further heating for 30 min. The total I content was determined on the resulting solution. Good agreement was obtained with the certified CRM value | 149 |
I | Infant formula and nutritional products | ICP-MS | Proposed AOAC method (first action 2012.14). Samples were treated with HNO3 in a closed microwave digestion oven prior to detection of total I using Te as an internal standard. The LOQ was reported as 1.5 μg per 100 g of sample. Recoveries of I spikes in nutritional products were in the range 90–105% | 150 |
Mn | Tea waste | FAAS | Investigation of the use of tea waste as an adsorbent for the removal of Mn from food samples using acetic acid. The LOD was 0.6 ng g−1. An artificial neural network was used to model Mn extraction efficiency | 178 |
Mo | Foodstuffs (8) and rice flour (NIST SRM 1568a) | FAAS | Preconcentration of Mo by CPE after formation of a complex with Victoria pure blue in the presence of excess thiocyanate and cetylpyridinium chloride. The method was applied to the analysis of cucumber, apple, banana, peas, soya beans, tomato, and tea. An LOD of 2.18 μg L−1 was reported for Mo | 45 |
Ni | Slovenian foodstuffs; mussel tissue (NIST SRM 2976) and typical diet (NIST SRM 1548a) | ICP-MS | Samples, including soya products (yoghurt and tofu), cacao and cacao products (dark and milk chocolates) teas and hazel nuts were subjected to microwave assisted acid digestion prior to measurement. The method was verified using SRMs | 147 |
Ni | Sugar cane spirit and whisky | FAAS | The determination of Ni in alcoholic beverages was carried out using an online SPE method prior to detection. The Ni was adsorbed onto mandarin orange (Citrus reticulate) orange peel and desorbed with 1 mol L−1 HCl as eluent. The LOD was given as 30.0 μg L−1, (n = 7). Throughput was reported as 15 samples h−1 | 59 |
Ni | Water and food | ETAAS | Extraction and preconcentration of Ni using SPE with carbon nanotubes functionalised with 2-(5-bromo-2-pyridylazo)-5-diethylaminophenol. The analyte was eluted in 1 M HNO3 with an enrichment factor of 180. The LOD was reported as 4.9 ng L−1 | 53 |
Pb | Cola, fruit juices and water | HR-CS FAAS | See Al, ref. 51. The LOD was 0.32 μg Pb L−1 | 51 |
Pb | Drinking water and alcoholic beverages | FAAS | See Cd, ref. 49. Results obtained for the determination of PbII in drinking water, distilled spirits and fruit wine were given in the ranges 9.2–23 ng mL−1, 23–50 ng mL−1 and 24–53 ng mL−1, respectively | 49 |
Pb | Honey | ETAAS | See Cd, ref. 62. The LOQ for Pb was reported as 5.4 ng g−1 | 62 |
Pb | Rice (Brazil) | ETAAS | See Al, ref. 75. The LOD value for Pb was reported as 16.0 μg kg−1 | 75 |
Pd | Brassica Napus | ETV-ICP-OES | Solid sampling method (5 mg) for determination of precious metals using aqueous standards dried on paper filter strips for calibration of instrument response. The reported LOD for Pt was 0.38 μg g−1 obtained using a 5 mg sample weight. Good agreement was achieved with results obtained with a sample digestion method | 61 |
Pt | Brassica Napus | ETV-ICP-OES | See Pd, ref. 61. The reported LOD for Pt was 0.38 μg g−1 | 61 |
Rh | Brassica Napus | ETV-ICP-OES | See Pd, ref. 61. The reported LOD for Rh was 0.13 μg Rh g−1 | 61 |
Sb | Water and foods | FAAS | A FI alumina micro-column SPE system was used to separate SbIII (as DDC complexes) and SbV (retained in solution) prior to determination by FAAS using a STAT to increase sensitivity. The LODs were 6.0 ng L−1 for SbIII and 8.2 ng L−1 for SbV with RSDs (n = 11) of 2.8% and 3.5% respectively | 56 |
Se | Rice (Se enriched) | ETAAS | CPE, (sequentially with water and cyclohexane) was used to separate inorganic and organic Se fractions achieving 82-fold enrichment. The method provided an LOD of 0.08 μg L−1, and an RSD of 2.1% (n = 11). Recoveries for Se in enriched samples were in the range 90.3–106.0% | 74 |
U | Bottled waters (France) | ICP-MS | Use of AQUALIX (calix[6]arene derivatives) columns for the separation and preconcentration of U from still mineral water, sparkling mineral water, and spring waters | 35, 50 |
Various (9) | “Baby leaf” vegetables | FAAS, ETAAS | Use of a HR-CS-AAS instrument for the determination of Ca, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, P, Na and Zn. Samples were prepared by microwave-assisted digestion. Recoveries were reported in the range 91% to 110% for these elements | 80 |
Various (14) | Cabernet Sauvignon wine | ICP-MS | Study of the effect of storage temperature and packaging on trace element content (0.1 to 500 μg L−1) of commercial wines | 179 |
Various (7) | Dog foods | ICP-MS, ICP-AES | Forty-five samples of over-the-counter dry dog foods and 5 therapeutic dry foods formulated for dogs with hepatic or renal disease were analysed for Ca, Cu, Fe, Mn, P, Se and Zn. The Ca and P concentrations were outside the recommended ranges for some food samples | 180 |
Various (7) | Edible salt and water CRMs (CWW-TMG waste water and SEM-2011 water sample in high-salt matrix, 0.5% (w/v)) | ICP-MS | An aerosol dilution protocol was described for the direct analysis of salt. The LODs reported for Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mn, Ni and Zn were 12, 6, 18, 2, 34, 68, and 87 ng L−1, respectively. Recovery of analyte spikes were in the range 96–101%. Verification of the method was achieved via the analysis of two CRMs | 65 |
Various (14) | Eggs (Brazil) | ICP-MS | Samples (34 conventional and 21 home produced) eggs were analysed for As, Ba, Cd, Co, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Mo, Pb, Se, Sr, V, and Zn content. Statistical differences were found in Ba, Cd, Co, Fe, Mo, Pb, Se and Zn levels in the two egg sample groups | 181 |
Various (4) | Foodstuffs | ICP-MS | Proposed AOAC method (first action 2013.06). Samples were digested using HNO3 under pressure in a closed vessel using microwave assisted heating. Elemental concentrations were reported in the following ranges: 0.06–21.4 mg kg−1 for As; 0.03–28.3 mg kg−1 for Cd; 0.04–0.6 mg kg−1 for Hg and 0.01–2.4 mg kg−1 for Pb as dry matter. The repeatability RSDs reported varied from 2.6 to 27% depending on the element and level | 182 |
Various (4) | Marine biological samples and fish protein (NRCC CRM DORM-3) | ICP-OES | A fast, green sample preparation method involving microwave assisted dissolution using choline chloride-oxalic acid deep eutectic solvent followed by HCl addition, centrifugation and filtration was applied to fish muscle and liver tissues, and macro-algae samples. Good agreement was obtained with certified CRM values for Cu, Fe, Ni and Zn with recoveries of >96% reported | 44 |
Various (26) | Multivitamin/multielement tablets (NIST SRM 3280) | Various | Characterisation by NIST of SRM 3280 using multiple techniques for 26 elements, 13 multivitamins and 2 carotenoids | 17 |
Various (13) | Slim instant coffee | ICP-OES | Sample preparation procedures (acid digestion, extraction, partial decomposition, solubilisation and dissolution) were compared for the determination of Ba, Ca, Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, Mg, Mn, Ni, P, Pb, Sr and Zn in coffees. It was reported that extraction with aqua regia gave the best results with LODs between 0.11 and 108 ng mL−1, and RSDs between 0.6 and 5% | 183 |
Various (8) | Tap and bottled water | ICP-OES | An SPE method employing Dowex 50W-x8 and Chelex-100 resins was used for the preconcentration of Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Ni, Pb and Zn. The LODs were reported in the range 0.01–0.39 μg L−1 with RSDs of <3% achieved using the Dowex resin | 184 |
Various (11) | Total diet (Italian study 2012–2014) | Various | A description of the protocols, methods and techniques used for the sampling, treatment and determination of Al, iAs, Cd, 134Cs, 137Cs, 40K, MeHg, iHg, Pb, 90Sr and U in total diets | 185 |
Various (4) | Vegetable oils | ETV-ICP-MS | Samples were prepared as emulsions with 1.5% v/v Triton X-100 and 50 μg mL−1 ascorbic acid. Nano particulate Pd was used as a modifier. Using a standard additions approach, the following LODs were obtained: 0.5 ng g−1 for As; 0.4 ng g−1 for Cu; 1.1 ng g−1 for Hg and 0.4 ng g−1 for Pb | 70 |
Various (11) | Whole milk powder (NIST 1549) and bovine liver (NIST 1577) SRMs | ICP-OES ICP-MS | Optimisation of a minimal consumption HNO3/H2O2 sample digestion procedure allowing a 10-fold reduction in amount of acid used. The determination of Ca, Cu, Fe, K, Mg, Mn, Mo, Na, and Zn was carried out by ICP-OES. The Cd, Co, and Pb were measured using ICP-MS. Good agreement was obtained with SRM certified values | 43 |
The heavy metal status of gluten-free foods for coeliac people was studied for the first time, using ICP-MS.148 Samples (n = 17) were obtained commercially in Palermo, Italy from locally and internationally-sourced gluten-free foodstuffs and analysed for As, Ba, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mn, Mo, Ni, Pb, Sb, Se, Sn, V and Zn. While all samples had heavy metal concentrations below locally acceptable levels, one sample of rice noodles from China had the highest As and Mo concentrations (0.088 and 0.47 mg kg−1, respectively) and local bread and breadstick samples showed the highest concentrations in Ba, Cd, Cu, Hg, Pb, Sr and V. Generally there was a low health risk associated with consumption of these products although Cd, Pb and Ni did present a potential risk. However, from some of the trace metal concentrations, the authors determined that a diet based largely on highly-refined cereal gluten-free products would not provide adequate elemental nutrition compared to wheat-derived products.
It was recently claimed that the Al content of infant formula is still too high.126 Analysis of 30 of the most widely-available and popular infant formulae in the UK were analysed by transversally-heated ETAAS following digestion with concentrated HNO3 and H2O2 (30% v/v). The Al concentrations ranged from 106–422 μg L−1 (based on a reconstituted volume) for non-soya milks; the two soya milks presented Al concentrations of 656 and 756 μg L−1 confirming the long-known fact that soya milk has much high Al levels. The authors detailed the impact of the packaging which in many cases contains Al foil. They concluded emotively that all samples of infant formula were contaminated with Al – by comparison with EU-recommended levels for drinking water (50 μg L−1) – and called for regulatory involvement.
Reliable techniques for iAs determination still need to be improved, as demonstrated by Rasmussen et al.151 using HG-AAS. The iAs was solubilised and oxidised to AsV using dilute HNO3 and H2O2 heated to 90 °C for 60 min in a water bath and eluted from strong anion exchange resin. Mean recoveries were 101–106% for spiked rice samples and CRMs. The LOD was 0.02 mg kg−1, repeatability 6% RSD and intra-laboratory reproducibility was 9%; the method compared favourably with HPLC-ICP-MS. Of 36 rice samples obtained commercially in Finland and analysed using the method, the lowest and highest median iAs concentrations were 0.09 (range: 0.03–0.16, n = 11) and 0.36 (0.13–0.60, n = 2) mg kg−1 for white and red rice, respectively, while black and brown rice presented median concentrations of 0.14 mg kg−1 (black rice: 0.08–0.31, n = 5; brown rice: 0.14–0.40, n = 10). Chen and Chen152 proposed an inexpensive and simple technique using a Si-based strong anion exchange cartridge to separate AsV from organic forms, following a microwave-assisted digestion of rice, for determination by HG-AFS. The LOD was 1.3 ng g−1 and the recovery was 94 ± 3%. The official AOAC method uses HPLC-ICP-MS for speciation of As (AsIII, AsV, MMA, DMA) in husked and polished (white) rice.153 Interlaboratory validation involved 13 reporting laboratories analysing 20 portions of ten rice samples of both types. The repeatability (RSDr) and reproducibility (RSDR) were in the ranges 3.8–7.7% and 10–36%, respectively and the performance characteristics deemed the method suitable for determination of iAs at concentrations ≥0.03 mg kg−1. Baba et al.154 proposed a pentafluorophenylpropyl RP-HPLC stationary phase with isocratic elution (HCOOH in MeOH) for an effective separation of AsIII, AsV, MMA and DMA in rice following an extraction with HNO3 (0.15 M). Given there is uncertainty in the extent of oxidation of AsIII caused by the digestion of rice with HNO3 (2% or 0.45 M for comparison), for subsequent determination by HPLC-ICP-MS, Maher et al.155 compared this method with XANES which does not require prior sample treatment. They confirmed similar proportions of AsIII, AsV, MMA and DMA were obtained with either technique and the latter indicated the presence of AsIII–GSH. Subsequent analysis by HPLC-ICP-MS of rice samples, available in Australia from local and imported sources, indicated total As ranged from 0.06 to 0.45 μg g−1. All iAs concentrations were below 0.2 μg g−1 and represented from 17 to 100% of As present. Negligible amounts of MMA were found although DMA was present in nearly all samples at concentrations <0.05 μg g−1, potentially arising from the use of As-containing phytochemicals, now banned in Australia.
AAS | Atomic absorption spectrometry |
AB | Arsenobetaine |
AC | Arsenocholine |
AES | Atomic emission spectrometry |
AFS | Atomic fluorescence spectrometry |
AMS | Accelerator mass spectrometry |
AOAC | Association of official analytical chemists |
ARS | Alizarin red S |
ASU | Atomic spectrometry update |
CCD | Charge coupled detector |
CDT | Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin |
CE | Capillary electrophoresis |
CF | Cystic fibrosis |
CF-CVAAS | Continuous flow cold vapour atomic absorption spectrometry |
CNS | Central nervous system |
CPE | Cloud point extraction |
CRM | Certified reference material |
CT | Computer tomography |
CTAC | Cetyltrimethylammonium chloride |
CV-AAS | Cold vapour atomic absorption spectrometry |
DEAE | Diethylaminoethyl |
DDC | Diethyldithiocarbamate |
DES | Deep eutectic solvents |
DLLME | Dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction |
DMA | Dimethylarsenic |
DPAA | Diphenylarsinic acid |
DRC | Dynamic reaction cell |
DT | Dithizone |
SEM-EDS | Scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersion X-rays analysis) |
EDTA | Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid |
EDXRF | Energy dispersive X-ray fluorescence |
EPA | Environmental protection agency |
ES | Electrospray |
ESI | Electrospray ionisation |
ETA | Electrothermal atomization |
ETAAS | Electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry |
ETV-ICP-AES | Electrothermal vaporization inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry |
EU | European union |
EXAFS | Extended X-ray absorption fine structure |
FAAS | Flame atomic absorption spectrometry |
FAES | Flame atomic emission spectrometry |
FAO | Food and agriculture organisation |
FDA | Food and drug agency |
FI | Flow injection |
FTIR | Fourier transform infrared |
GC | Gas chromatography |
GD | Glow discharge |
GF | Graphite furnace |
GPx | Glutathione peroxidase |
GSH | Glutathione |
H&E | Haematoxylin and eosin |
HG | Hydride generation |
HLLE | Homogeneous liquid–liquid extraction |
HPLC | High performance liquid chromatography |
HR-CS-FAAS | High resolution continuum source FAAS |
HR-ICP-MS | High resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry |
IC | Ion chromatography |
ICP-MS | Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry |
ID | Isotope dilution |
IL | Ionic liquid |
INAA | Instrumental neutron actovation analysis |
IUD | Intra-uterine device |
LA | Laser ablation |
LC | Liquid chromatography |
LDA | Linear discriminant analysis |
LIBS | Laser induced breakdown spectroscopy |
LOD | Limit of detection |
LOQ | Limit of quantification |
MALDI | Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization |
MC-ICP-MS | Multicollector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry |
MIP | Microwave induced plasma |
MMA | Monomethylarsenic |
MS | Mass spectrometry |
MSIS | Multimode sample introduction system |
NDT | Neural tube defects |
NIST | National institute of standards and technology |
OES | Optical emission spectrometry |
PAGE | Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis |
PGE | Platinum group elements |
PCA | Principal component analysis |
PIXE | Particle-induced X-ray emission |
PT | Proficiency testing |
PTFE | Poly(tetrafluoroethylene) |
QD | Quantum dot |
Q-ICP-MS | Quadrupole inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry |
RA | Residual acid |
RBS | Rutherford back scattering |
RCC | Residual carbon content |
REE | Rare earth elements |
RNAA | Radiochemical neutron activation analysis |
RP | Reversed phase |
RSD | Relative standard deviation |
SD | Standard deviation |
SDS | Sodium dodecylsulfate |
SEC | Size exclusion chromatography |
SeCys | Selenocysteine |
SEM | Scanning electron microscopy |
SEM-EDX | Scanning electron microscopy-energy dispersion X-rays analysis |
SF-ICP-MS | Sector field inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry |
SIMS | Secondary ion mass spectrometry |
SPE | Solid phase extraction |
SPME | Solid phase microextraction |
SRM | Standard reference material |
SR-XRF | Synchrotron radiation X-ray fluorescence |
STAT | Slotted tube atom trap |
TIMS | Thermal ionization mass spectrometry |
TMAH | Tetramethylammonium hydroxide |
TMAO | Trimethylarsine oxide |
TOF | Time-of-flight |
TXRF | Total reflection X-ray fluorescence |
USN | Ultrasonic nebuliser |
USP | United states pharmacopeia |
UV | Ultraviolet |
VG | Vapour generation |
WHO | World health organisation |
XANES | X-ray absorption near-edge structure |
XAS | X-ray absorption spectroscopy |
XPS | X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy |
XRD | X-ray diffraction |
XRF | X-ray fluorescence |
XRF-CT | X-ray fluorescence computer tomography |
M r | Relative molecular mass |
2D | Two dimensional |
3D | Three dimensional |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2015 |