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Article
Generation of Volatile Cadmium and Zinc Species Based on Solution Anode Glow Discharge Induced Plasma Electrochemical Processes Xing Liu, Zhifu Liu, Zhenli Zhu, Dong He, Siqi Yao, Hongtao Zheng, and Shenghong Hu Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b00126 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Feb 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 18, 2017
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Analytical Chemistry
Generation of Volatile Cadmium and Zinc Species Based
1 2
on Solution Anode Glow Discharge Induced Plasma
3
Electrochemical Processes
4
Xing Liu†, Zhifu Liu†, Zhenli Zhu†*, Dong He†, Siqi Yao†, Hongtao Zheng‡,
5
Shenghong Hu†
6 7
†
8
Sciences, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, 430074, China
9
‡
State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, School of Earth
State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, Faculty of
10
Materials Science and Chemistry, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074,
11
China
12
*
13
+86-27-6788-3456. E-mail:
[email protected],
[email protected] To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: +86-27-6788-3452. Fax:
14 15
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ABSTRACT: In this study, a novel high efficiency vapor generation strategy was
2
proposed based on solution anode glow discharge for the determination of Cd and Zn
3
by atomic fluorescence spectrometry. In this approach, a glow discharge microplasma
4
was acted as a gaseous cathode to initiate the plasma electrochemical vapor
5
generation of Cd and Zn. Cadmium/Zinc ions could be converted into molecular
6
species efficiently at the plasma-liquid interface from a supporting electrolyte (HCl,
7
pH = 3.2). It was found that the overall efficiency of the plasma electrochemical vapor
8
generation (PEVG) system was much higher than the conventional electrochemical
9
hydride generation (EcHG) and HCl-KBH4 system. With no requirement for other
10
reducing reagents, this new approach enabled us to detect Cd and Zn with detection
11
limits as low as 0.003 µg L-1 for Cd and 0.3 µg L-1 for Zn. Good repeatability (relative
12
standard deviation (RSD), n = 5) was 2.4% for Cd (0.1 µg L-1) and 1.7% for Zn (10
13
µg L-1) standard. The accuracy of the proposed method was successfully validated
14
through analysis of cadmium in reference material of stream sediment (GBW07311),
15
soil (GBW07401), rice (GBW10045), and zinc in simulated water sample (GSB
16
07-1184-2000). Replacing a metal electrode with a plasma offers the advantage of
17
eliminating potential interactions between the species in liquid and the electrode,
18
which solves the issues associated with electrode encountered in conventional EcHG.
19
The ability to initiate electrochemical vapor generation reactions at the plasma-liquid
20
interface opens a new approach for chemical vapor generation based on interactions
21
between plasma gas-phase electrons and solutions.
22
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Analytical Chemistry
1
Chemical vapor generation (CVG) is a widely adopted sample introduction
2
technique in atomic spectrometry for its enhanced sensitivity and selectivity.1
3
However, conventional CVG methods involve the use of toxic and expensive reagents,
4
such as, tetrahydroborate(III), tin chloride or potassium permanganate. In addition,
5
these reagents are potential source of contamination and their purification for use in
6
ultratrace analysis is time consuming. The replacement of CVG by powerful and
7
greener alternatives has been a hot topic in analytical chemistry.2,3
8
Electrochemical hydride generation (EcHG),4,5 which uses electrons supplied
9
from the cathode as reductant, represents a suitable alternative to conventional CVG.
10
It has been demonstrated that hydrides of several elements, including As, Hg, Bi, Sb,
11
Pb, Ge, Te, Sn, Se, Zn and Cd,6-16 could be achieved by EcHG. The most significant
12
advantage of EcHG is that it obviates the need for chemical reducing reagents.
13
However, the performance of the EcHG process is strongly influenced by the cathode
14
material. Significant interferences from concomitant transition metals ions have been
15
observed due to the reduction and deposition of these ions on cathode surface.17
16
Moreover, adsorption of gaseous reaction products on the electrode surface also
17
reduces vapor generation efficiency.17
18
The interactions between plasmas and liquids have become increasingly more
19
important topics because of its great promise in the fields of analytical chemistry,
20
nanomaterials synthesis, and medical sciences etc.18-20 Plasmas in contact with liquids
21
initiate complex chemistry that leads to the generation of a wide range of reactive
22
species. Especially, in an electrolytic configuration with a cathodic plasma electrode,
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electrons from the plasma are injected into the solution, leading to solvation and
2
ensuing
3
electrochemical cell with an atmospheric-pressure microplasma cathode, and
4
demonstrated the electron-transfer reactions at the plasma-liquid interface.23,24 Atif et
5
al. also investigated the electron transfer events at the solid-gas interface.25 It should
6
be noted that the reactive species may also interact with species in the liquid via
7
chemical pathways in parallel to the electrochemical pathways.26 The plasma
8
chemical processes in dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) has been used for the
9
synthesis of chemicals,27,28 and our group also found that radicals formed in DBD can
10
be used to reduce metal ions to their vapors.29,30 However, the doping of hydrogen is
11
necessary for the vapor generation of Cd and Zn in DBD.29,31 We also demonstrated
12
that the vapor generation could be achieved by solution cathode glow discharge
13
induced plasma chemical process. However, it is only limited to Hg, Os and I.32-34 In
14
principle, the plasma electrochemical system, in which plasmas are used as gaseous
15
cathode, have a great potential of integrating both the advantages of plasma
16
processing and those of electrochemistry.
reduction
reactions.21,22
Richmonds
et
al.
reported
an
aqueous
17
Herein we describe a new strategy for the generation of volatile species of Cd
18
and Zn based on solution anode glow discharge induced plasma electrochemical
19
processes. The use of plasma cathode eliminates the potential interactions between the
20
species in liquid and the metal electrode, and thus the problems of conventional EcHG
21
caused by cathode materials are avoided. The dissolved Cd and Zn ions could be
22
readily converted into molecular volatile species efficiently by the plasma
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Analytical Chemistry
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electrochemical vapor generation (PEVG). In addition, it was found that charge
2
transfer depends on the properties of the discharge; for example, the conversion
3
(vapor generation) efficiency of Cd and Zn is found to increase with discharge current,
4
which in turn is related to the flux of plasma electrons to the solution surface.
5
EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
6
Instrumentation. A homemade plasma electrochemistry cell (PEC) (cf. Figure 1)
7
was applied for the vapor generation of Cd and Zn. The H-type divided cell (2 cm
8
internal diameter, about 5 mL reaction volumes) consisted of two compartments, the
9
cathodic and anodic. A Pt foil immersed in an anolyte acted as the anode and a
10
microplasma was used as cathode. The microplasma was initiated by temporarily
11
reducing the distance between the tip of a stainless steel capillary tube (i.d., 1 mm;
12
o.d., 2 mm and 5 cm length) and the solution surface. The gap, or height of the
13
discharge, was set to about 1 mm in the present study. A 5-kΩ resistor inserted
14
between the microplasma cathode and the negative output of the high-voltage power
15
supply stabilizes the discharge current.
16
A syringe pump (Harvard Apparatus PHD 2000, Holliston, MA) and a peristaltic
17
pump (BT 100-1L, Baoding Langer Constant Flow Pump Co., Ltd., China) were
18
employed to drive the sample and waste solutions respectively. The flow velocities of
19
Ar and H2 were monitored by mass flow controller. The microplasma was sustained
20
between the tip of a stainless steel capillary tube and the solution surface by using a
21
HV dc power supply (HB-Z202-200AC, Tianjin Hengbo High Voltage Power Supply
22
Plant, China). The volatile species produced from this cell were swept by an argon
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stream and mixed with auxiliary H2 and directed to a quartz furnace atomizer (QTA)
2
and detected by AFS (AFS 9130, Beijing Titan Instruments Co. Ltd., Beijing, China).
3
The Cd/Zn high performance hollow cathode lamp (General Research Institute for
4
Nonferrous Metals, Beijing, China) was used as the radiation source.
5
Analytical
Procedures.
The
analytical
procedures
of
the
plasma
6
electrochemistry vapor generation atomic fluorescence spectrometry (PEVG-AFS) are
7
schematically shown in Figure 1. First, the sample solution was continuously
8
introduced into the cell through a glass capillary (0.38 mm inner diameter) by the
9
syringe pump. Second, the high voltage dc power supply was turned on; a
10
microplasma was then ignited by temporarily reducing the distance between the tip of
11
the stainless steel capillary and liquid surface. During the discharge process, the
12
plasma was spatially stationary and the discharge current was kept at 10 mA
13
(corresponding voltage, ∼550 V), controlled by adjustment of the power supply
14
voltage. Third, the generated volatile species produced from the plasma
15
electrochemical process were swept by an argon stream through a gas-liquid separator
16
(GLS) and then to a T-tube and mixed with auxiliary H2. Last, the gas containing
17
volatile species was directed to the atomizer and detected by AFS. The following
18
operating conditions are employed: photomultiplier voltage, -280/-270V; lamp current,
19
60/60 mA for Cd/Zn, respectively.
20
Reagents and Samples. All chemicals used were at least of analytical grade and
21
all solutions were prepared using high-purity water with a resistivity of 18.2 MΩ cm,
22
obtained from a water purification system (Labconco, Kansas, USA). Stock standard
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Analytical Chemistry
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solutions of 1000 mg L-1 of Cd were supplied by National Analysis Center for Iron
2
and Steel (Beijing, China). Working standards were prepared from stepwise dilution
3
of the stock solution with diluted acid. For the interference study, the following
4
chemicals: NaNO3, KCl, NiCl2·6H2O, CoCl2·6H2O, Pb(NO3)2, Cu(NO3)2·3H2O,
5
SnCl2·2H2O, Zn(NO3)2·6H2O and Cd(NO3)2·4H2O were employed. All the
6
concentrations of the interferences were expressed as metal ions in the present study.
7
Argon of 99.999% purity (Oxygen Co. of Wuhan Iron & Steel Group, Wuhan, China)
8
was used as the carrier gas. Standard reference materials for stream sediment
9
(GBW07311, Cd), soil (GBW07401, Cd), rice (GBW10045, Cd) obtained from
10
National Research Center for Standard Materials (Beijing, China), and simulated
11
water sample (GSB 07-1184-2000, Zn) developed by the Institute for Environmental
12
Reference Materials Ministry of Environmental Protection (Beijing, China) were
13
applied to evaluate the accuracy of the present method.
14
Sample Preparation. The simulated natural water sample GSB 07-1184-2000
15
was simply diluted and was adjusted to the pH of 3.2 before analysis. The three solid
16
samples were firstly dried at 105 °C for more than 24 h to remove its moisture content.
17
The procedures used for sample decomposition were as follows: Sample powder (0.05
18
g for GBW07311 and GBW07401, 0.25 g for GBW10045) was weighed and placed
19
in a 10mL home-made PTFE-lined stainless steel bomb. After wetting with a few
20
drops of ultra-pure water, 1 mL of HNO3 and 1 mL of HF were added and the bomb
21
was sealed and placed in an electric oven and heated to 190 °C for 48 h. After cooling,
22
the bomb was opened and placed on a hotplate at 115 °C and evaporated to incipient
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dryness (but not baked). This was followed by adding 1 mL HNO3 and evaporating to
2
the second round of incipient dryness. Then, the resultant salt was re-dissolved by
3
adding 3 mL of 30% HNO3 and resealed and heated in the bomb at 190 °C for 12 h.
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After cooling, the vessels were taken to an electrical hot plate at 115 °C to heat to
5
almost dryness; then, 5 mL of diluted HCl (pH = 3.2) was added to redissolve all the
6
analyte. The final solution was transferred to a polyethylene bottle and diluted to an
7
appropriate volume with HCl (pH = 3.2). A reagent blank solution was prepared in
8
the same way.
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Analytical Chemistry
1
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
2
Generation of Volatile Species of Cd and Zn by Using Plasma Cathode. In
3
conventional EcHG, both the cathode and anode are connected to the electrolyte, and
4
metal
5
electrode/electrolyte interfaces. In our PEVG, a microplasma were used as cathode to
6
initiate the plasma electrochemical vapor generation of Cd and Zn, where only the
7
anode (Pt foil) is immersed in the electrolyte solution. To test whether Cd and Zn ions
8
in the solution could be reduced to the volatile species by using the microplasma
9
cathode, the gases in the cathodic cell was introduced to an atomic fluorescence
10
spectrometer. It was found that significant fluorescence signal of Cd and Zn could be
11
obtained even with concentration as low as 0.2 µg L-1 and 5 µg L-1, respectively,
12
when the quartz tube atomizer is heated by hydrogen-argon entrained flame (Figure 2).
13
In an effort to ensure that all signals detected during plasma exposure indeed
14
originated from the generation of volatile metal species, rather than as an aerosol
15
produced by plasma-liquid interaction, the volatile products were also directed to an
16
ICP-OES. Significant Cd/Zn signal were also obtained, but no measurable signal of
17
spiked Na/Mg was observed even at a solution of 100 mg L-1. These results
18
demonstrated that the vapor generation of Cd and Zn indeed be readily achieved with
19
PEVG.
volatile
species
are
generated
by
charge
transfer
at
the
metal
20
In subsequent experiments, vapor generation of Cd and Zn was also performed
21
by using microplasma as anode (e.g. solution cathode glow discharge, SCGD) with
22
the same discharge cell and experimental conditions, simply by inversing the polarity
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of the electrode. It was found that no measurable signal of Zn was observed even at a
2
concentration of 1 mg L-1. Although the Cd signal was observed at the concentration
3
of 100 µg L-1 by SCGD, its efficiency was at least 1200 times lower than that of
4
PEVG (Figure S1). This result indicated that the charge-transfer process using
5
microplasma cathode is necessary/preferable for the vapor generation of Cd and Zn.
6
Meanwhile, it is interesting to note that the change of polarity of electrodes can
7
significantly enhance the emission sensitivity of some elements(Cd, Zn and Ag
8
etc).35,36 All these results demonstrates that the use of plasma cathode presents a
9
different behavior compared with solution cathode and it is preferable for the vapor
10
generation of Cd and Zn.
11
Furthermore, the vapor generation efficiency of the PEVG system was also
12
compared with traditional EcHG using Cd (Figure S2, supporting information). It
13
should be noted that the EcHG was performed with the same electrolyte condition and
14
cathode material as reported in the reference.10 With the discharge current of 10 mA,
15
significant Cd atomic fluorescence signal was obtained from PEVG even with 0.5 µg
16
L-1, whereas no measurable Cd signal was observed from EcHG even with cadmium
17
concentration as high as 20 µg L-1. It was found that the Cd signal obtained from
18
traditional EcHG operated with 150 mA was still decreased by a factor of 35
19
compared to PEVG with an operation current of 10 mA. These results suggested that
20
electron utilization efficiency and vapor generation efficiency of PEVG were much
21
higher than EcHG, which also implied that the plasma chemical process may also be
22
involved in PEVG in addition to electron-transfer electrochemical process. Replacing
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Analytical Chemistry
1
a metal cathode with a plasma in PEVG has the unique advantage of eliminating any
2
potential metal deposition and contamination of the metal electrode, which is common
3
in traditional EcHG.
4
Several experiments were undertaken to determine the identity of volatile species
5
generated in PEVG. Firstly, we found that there was no measurable atomic
6
fluorescence signal from Cd and Zn with the atomizer at room temperature even at 10
7
mg L-1. These results suggested that the generated volatile Cd and Zn species were
8
both in molecular form since free Cd/Zn atom vapor can be detected at room
9
temperature.29 Then, the generated of Cd/Zn vapors was investigated by a Shimadzu
10
AA6300C electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry. As shown in Figure 3, no
11
measurable signal was observed below the temperature of 300 °C. The cadmium
12
atomic absorption signal increased rapidly with further elevation of the atomizer
13
temperature and plateaued at 500°C. The volatile species of Zn also presented a
14
similar trend. Because there is only one steep slope, perhaps only one molecular
15
species (presumably CdH2/ZnH2) was generated by using PEVG. Although the
16
collected volatile species of Cd and Zn could be preserved for at least 7 hours at room
17
temperature (Figure S3), we failed to characterize them with GC-MS.
18
In our proposed PEVG system, Cd2+ and Zn2+ could be readily converted into
19
volatile molecular species with a microplasma as a gaseous, metal-free cathode. The
20
metallic capillary is not in contact with electrolyte and serves only as an electrical
21
conductor, and thus the properties of this metal capillary do not change significantly
22
during electrolysis and the metallic capillary need not be cleaned or replaced, which is
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in contrast to traditional EcHG. In addition, the generated volatile species can be
2
released rapidly from the solution because the reaction occurs at the gas-liquid
3
interface. Furthermore, the proposed PEVG eliminates the use of unstable reducing
4
reagents (i.e., NaBH4) or hydrogen gas (DBD plasma-CVG29,31,37); only a small
5
amount of hydrochloric acid is needed. Therefore, it provides a green technique for
6
vapor generation, which reduces the generation of hazardous waste and also avoids
7
possible contamination from reagents.
8
Optimization of PEVG-AFS.
9
To achieve the maximum signal, the effects of experimental parameters such as
10
material of metal capillary, electrolyte pH, discharge current, carrier gas flow rate,
11
hydrogen flow rate and sample flow rate were evaluated. Unless otherwise specified,
12
three replicates were performed at each set of the studied parameters.
13
Material of capillary. In conventional electrochemistry, electrons in the metal
14
cathode are bound by the work function of the material, however, with a plasma
15
cathode system, the reducing electrons are not bound to a metal electrode.36 Therefore,
16
in principle, the properties of the metal capillary in PEVG should not affect the vapor
17
generation of Cd and Zn. To investigate this, three materials (steel, copper, graphite)
18
were used as the working electrode in the cathodic cell. It was found that comparable
19
fluorescence signal of Cd was obtained for all these three materials (Figure 4a). This
20
result reinforces our belief that the proposed PEVG are not dependent on the
21
characteristics of the working electrode materials but reproducible over various
22
materials. Replacing the metal cathode with a plasma offers a unique advantage of
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Analytical Chemistry
1
eliminating potential interactions between the species in liquid and the metal electrode.
2
Based on this result, steel capillary was used in the subsequent studies.
3
pH of Electrolyte. The influence of pH on the vapor generation of Cd and Zn
4
were studied with HCl and HNO3. As shown in Figure 4b, no detectable signal was
5
observed in the pH range from 1 to 2 for both Cd and Zn. A possible reason is that the
6
decrease of pH is beneficial to hydrogen evolution reaction and play down the
7
reduction efficiency of zinc and cadmium. The AFS signal increased with pH varying
8
from 2.0 to 3.2, where the maximum signals were both achieved for Cd and Zn. The
9
signal response then decreased sharply with further increase in pH. In addition, the
10
plasma stability worsened at high pH, probably caused by the low conductivity of the
11
electrolyte under low acid concentrations. Similar phenomenon was observed in both
12
HCl and HNO3 media, which ensured that the effect was caused by pH. On basis of
13
these results, pH 3.2 was selected in the following experiments. Therefore, pH of 3.2
14
of HCl was employed for further experiments.
15
Discharge Current. The dependence of the vapor generation processes on
16
discharge current was also investigated in the range of 6-14 mA (Figure 4c), and the
17
intensity was observed to increase almost linearly with the current up to 14 mA. With
18
raising discharge current, a higher flux of electrons reaches the solution surface, and
19
the rate of electrochemical reduction of Cd/Zn increases. However, when the current
20
was set higher than 15 mA, overheating of the cathode occurred due to the cathode
21
sputtering and the discharge also became unstable. As a compromise, an electrolytic
22
current of 10 mA was used throughout this work.
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H2 Flow Rate. As reported in previous EcHG work,25 only a small amount of
2
hydrogen was produced in the electrolysis process, which is insufficient to maintain
3
an Ar/H2 flame. Therefore, auxiliary H2 is necessary in our PEVG-AFS system for the
4
atomization of volatile Cd and Zn species. The dependence of the Cd and Zn
5
fluorescence intensity on H2 flow rate was tested in the range of 0-90 mL min-1. The
6
result was shown in Figure 5a. It was observed that fluorescence signal could not be
7
obtained when the flow rate of auxiliary hydrogen was set below 20 mL min-1. Both
8
the fluorescence signal of Cd and Zn first increased remarkably along with the H2
9
flow rate from 20 to 40 mL min-1, reached a maximum at 50 mL min-1, then decayed
10
afterwards. In this work, 50 mL min-1 H2 flow rate was chosen.
11
Ar Flow Rate and Sample Flow rate. The influence of Ar flow rate on the
12
fluorescence signal of Cd/Zn was studied in the range of 100-500 mL min-1. Figure.
13
5b shows that, the fluorescence signal reached its maximum value at 300 mL min-1
14
and then declined. The result suggests that the use of high carrier gas flow rates can
15
enhance the transport efficiency, but can also decreases the signal because of
16
volumetric dilution of Cd and Zn vapor. As shown in Figure. 5c, the maximum signal
17
of Cd was observed at a sample flow rate of 2.5 mL min−1, whereas the optimal
18
sample flow rate for Zn was found to be at 2.1 mL min−1. However, the fluorescence
19
signal response decreased with further increase of the flow rate beyond 3.5 mL min-1,
20
as the result of a decrease in the residence time of the analytes inside the cell. Based
21
on these results, Ar flow rate of 300 mL min-1 and sample flow rate of 2.5 mL min−1
22
were selected in the subsequent studies.
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Analytical Chemistry
1
Interference Studies. Transition metal (Cu, Co, and Ni) ions are usually
2
considered as serious interferent for EcHG because these ions are easily reduced to
3
their metallic states during electrolysis, subsequently deposited on the cathode surface
4
and then dispersed over it. As a result, the cathode hydrogen overvoltage is altered
5
and affects the efficiency for generation of the volatile analyte species.38 In addition,
6
the vapor generation of Cd/Zn are also highly susceptible to the interference from
7
other hydride forming elements.5 To evaluate the effect of the interference from
8
coexisting ions, the effects of eight ions, including those from transition metal and
9
hydride-forming elements on the determination of 0.5 µg L-1 Cd2+ and 10 µg L-1 Zn2+
10
were studied by PEVG. The interferences from these ions are summarized in Table 1.
11
The values are given as the recovery in the presence of interfering ions relative to the
12
interference-free response.
13
It can be seen that there is no significant interference from these studied ions at
14
concentration of 1 mg L-1. However, severe depression effects were observed when
15
these ions were present at concentrations of 10 mg L−1 especially for Zn. Na+, K+, Ni2+
16
and Co2+ caused the most severe interference. The interference mechanism of Na+ and
17
K+ is unclear at present. Similar observation was also reported in our previously DBD
18
plasma-CVG studies29. One possibility is that high concentrations of ions alter the
19
conductivity of the samples, which in turn affect the electrical characteristics of the
20
plasma. In the case of Sn2+, the decrease in the signal of Zn2+ and Cd2+ may be
21
explained by the formation of tin hydride, which act as competitive reactions to the
22
formation of cadmium/zinc hydride. It should be noted there is no significant effect of
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1
Ni2+, Co2+ and Cu2+ at concentration up to 1 mg L-1 in our proposed PEVG. However,
2
in traditional EcHG, 33%, 44%, 14% signal enhancement on Cd signal were reported
3
in the presence of 1 mg L-1 Ni2+, Co2+ and Cu2+, respectively.5 The results
4
demonstrated that PEVG has higher tolerable levels for coexisting Ni2+, Co2+ and
5
Cu2+ in the sample compared to EcHG.
6
Analytical Characteristics. Under the optimized conditions (electrolyte, HCl
7
(pH = 3.2), discharge current of 10 mA, Ar gas flow rate of 300 mL min-1, and sample
8
flow rate of 2.5 mL min-1), the analytical characteristics of PEVG-AFS were
9
evaluated. The calibration curves of fluorescence signals versus ion concentration
10
were linear in the range of 0.05-0.5 µg L-1 for Cd (R2 = 0.9910) and 2-20 µg L-1 for
11
Zn (R2 = 0.9980). The repeatability value, expressed as the relative standard deviation
12
(RSD, n = 5) of the signal, was 2.4% for Cd (0.1 µg L-1) and 1.7% for Zn (10 µg L-1)
13
standard. The limits of detection (LODs), were calculated to be 0.003 µg L-1 for Cd
14
and 0.3 µg L-1 for Zn. This suggests that the proposed PEVG is one of the highest
15
sensitive vapor generation techniques and can be used for the determination of
16
ultratrace cadmium and zinc (Table 2).
17
The overall efficiency of the PEVG system was also evaluated by a comparison
18
with conventional CVG system using Cd. For the conventional CVG system, we
19
followed the method reported by Li et al.39 with 3.5% (m/v) KBH4 as reducing
20
solution, 1.5% (m/v) thiourea, and 0.7 mg L-1 cobalt prepared in 0.2% (m/v) KOH,
21
2.5% (v/v) HCl as carrier solution. Identical sample introduction and gas flow rates
22
were used for the conventional HCl-KBH4 CVG system and continuous-flow PEVG.
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It was observed that the fluorescence signal of cadmium obtained from PEVG was
2
improved by a factor of 2.3 compared to the conventional HCl-KBH4 CVG system,
3
which indicates that the PEVG system is a high-efficiency vapor generation technique.
4
Additionally, the vapor efficiency was also estimated from a comparison of the
5
relative concentrations of cadmium and zinc in the feed and waste solutions after the
6
sample was subjected to PEVG. The vapor generation efficiency was calculated to be
7
73 ± 5% for Cd and 30 ± 2% for Zn, which are much higher than those obtained with
8
EcHG.21,40 These results further demonstrated that our proposed PEVG system
9
provided a highly efficiency vapor generation method for Cd and Zn.
10
To evaluate the accuracy of the present method, certified reference materials
11
including stream sediment (GBW07311, Cd), soil (GBW07401, Cd), rice
12
(GBW10045, Cd) and simulated water sample (GSB 07-1184-2000, Zn) were
13
analyzed. In the initial experiment, the external standard curve method was used to
14
analyze all the four certified reference materials. However, the obtained concentration
15
for the stream sediment sample was only about 63% of the certified value. Therefore,
16
stream sediment was analyzed by the standard addition method to overcome the
17
matrix suppression. The analytical results obtained are given in Table 3. The values of
18
the certified reference materials determined by the developed method agreed well
19
with the reference values. All these results suggested that the proposed method can be
20
used for the determination of Cd/Zn in environmental and geological samples.
21
CONCLUSIONS
22
In summary, a novel vapor generation strategy for Cd and Zn was developed
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based on solution anode glow discharge induced plasma-liquid electrochemical
2
reaction. It was found that the generated volatile species of Cd and Zn were both
3
molecular species in nature and the reaction efficiency depended on discharge
4
parameters (e.g., discharge current and solution pH). This PEVG method achieves
5
high vapor generation efficiency at a low current, and the absence of a solid electrode
6
also successfully solves the issues associated with electrode encountered in EcHG.
7
However, the applicability of PEVG should be improved further, although we also
8
found similar effects in the case of Hg, Pb, Ag and Tl; in addition, the underlying
9
mechanism of this method should be studied in the future (e.g., overpotential of
10
hydrogen evolution on the plasma-liquid interface, detailed reaction sequence).
11
Acknowledgement
12
We acknowledge the financial support from the National Nature Science
13
Foundation of China (No. 41673014, 21375120, and 41521001), Program for New
14
Century Excellent Talents in University from the Ministry of Education (No.
15
NCET-13-1015), Nature Science Foundation of Hubei Province (2016CFA038) and
16
International
17
(2014DFA20720).
Science
&
Technology
Cooperation
18
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REFERENCES: (1) Sturgeon, R.; Guo, X.; Mester, Z. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2005, 382, 881-883. (2) Wu, P.; He, L.; Zheng, C.; Hou, X.; Sturgeon, R. E. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2010, 25, 1217-1246. (3) He, Q.; Zhu, Z.; Hu, S. Rev. Anal. Chem 2014, 33, 111-121. (4) Arbab-Zavar, M. H.; CHamsaz, M.; Youssefi, A.; Aliakbari, M. Anal. Chim. Acta 2006, 576, 215-220. (5) Arbab-Zavar, M. H.; Chamsaz, M.; Youssefi, A.; Aliakbari, M. Anal. Chim. Acta 2005, 546, 126-132. (6) Sengupta, M. K.; Sawalha, M. F.; Ohira, S.-I.; Idowu, A. D.; Dasgupta, P. K. Anal. Chem. 2010, 82, 3467-3473. (7) Bolea, E.; Laborda, F.; Castillo, J. R.; Sturgeon, R. E. Spectrochim. Acta, Part B 2004, 59, 505-513. (8) Zhang, W.; Su, Z.; Chu, X.; Yang, X. Talanta 2010, 80, 2106-2112. (9) Sáenz, M.; Fernández, L.; Domínguez, J.; Alvarado, J. Spectrochim. Acta, Part B 2012, 71, 107-111. (10) Zhang, W. B.; Yang, X. A.; Xue, J. J.; Wang, S. B. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2012, 27, 928-936. (11) Arbab-Zavar, M. H.; Chamsaz, M.; Youssefi, A.; Aliakbari, M. Anal. Sci. 2012, 28, 717-722. (12) Ding, W.-W.; Sturgeon, R. Spectrochim. Acta, Part B 1996, 51, 1325-1334. (13) Ding, W.-W.; Sturgeon, R. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 1996, 11, 225-230. (14) Jiang, X.; Gan, W.; Han, S.; He, Y. Spectrochim. Acta, Part B 2008, 63, 710-713. (15) Zhang, W.; Yang, X.; Chu, X. Microchem. J. 2009, 93, 180-187. (16) Jiang, X.; Gan, W.; Wan, L.; Deng, Y.; Yang, Q.; He, Y. J Hazard Mater 2010, 184, 331-336. (17) Denkhaus, E.; Golloch, A.; Guo, X. M.; Huang, B. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2001, 16, 870-878. (18) Fridman, G.; Friedman, G.; Gutsol, A.; Shekhter, A. B.; Vasilets, V. N.; Fridman, A. Plasma Process. Polym. 2008, 5, 503-533. (19) Staack, D.; Fridman, A.; Gutsol, A.; Gogotsi, Y.; Friedman, G. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2008, 47, 8020-8024. (20) Yan, T.; Zhong, X.; Rider, A. E.; Lu, Y.; Furman, S. A.; Ostrikov, K. Chem. Commun. 2014, 50, 3144-3147. (21) Nováková, E.; Rychlovský, P.; Resslerová, T.; Hraníček, J.; Červený, V. Spectrochim. Acta, Part B 2016, 117, 42-48. (22) Leng, A.; Lin, Y.; Tian, Y.; Wu, L.; Jiang, X.; Hou, X.; Zheng, C. Anal. Chem. 2017, 89, 703-710. (23) Richmonds, C.; Witzke, M.; Bartling, B.; Lee, S. W.; Wainright, J.; Liu, C.-C.; Sankaran, R. M. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 17582-17585. (24) Witzke, M.; Rumbach, P.; Go, D. B.; Sankaran, R. M. J. Phys. D: Appl. Phys. 2012, 45, 442001-442005. (25) Zhang, W.; Yang, X. Anal. Chim. Acta 2008, 611, 127-133. (26) Rumbach, P.; Witzke, M.; Sankaran, R. M.; Go, D. B. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 16264-16267. (27) Yi, Y.; Zhou, J.; Guo, H.; Zhao, J.; Su, J.; Wang, L.; Wang, X.; Gong, W. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2013, 52, 8446-8449. (28) Wang, A.; Qin, M.; Guan, J.; Wang, L.; Guo, H.; Li, X.; Wang, Y.; Prins, R.; Hu, Y. Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2008, 47, 6052-6054. (29) Zhu, Z.; Wu, Q.; Liu, Z.; Liu, L.; Zheng, H.; Hu, S. Anal. Chem. 2013, 85, 4150-4156. (30) Liu, Z.; Zhu, Z.; Wu, Q.; Hu, S.; Zheng, H. Analyst 2011, 136, 4539-4544.
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(31) Zhu, Z.; Liu, L.; Li, Y.; Peng, H.; Liu, Z.; Guo, W.; Hu, S. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2014, 406, 7523-7531. (32) Zhu, Z.; Chan, G. C.-Y.; Ray, S. J.; Zhang, X.; Hieftje, G. M. Anal. Chem. 2008, 80, 7043-7050. (33) Zhu, Z.; He, Q.; Shuai, Q.; Zheng, H.; Hu, S. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2010, 25, 1390-1394. (34) Zhu, Z.; Huang, C.; He, Q.; Xiao, Q.; Liu, Z.; Zhang, S.; Hu, S. Talanta 2013, 106, 133-136. (35) Liu, X.; Zhu, Z.; He, D.; Zheng, H.; Gan, Y.; Belshaw, N. S.; Hu, S.; Wang, Y. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2016, 31, 1089-1096. (36) Greda, K.; Swiderski, K.; Jamroz, P.; Pohl, P. Anal. Chem. 2016, 88, 8812-8820. (37) Yang, M.; Xue, J.; Li, M.; Han, G.; Xing, Z.; Zhang, S.; Zhang, X. Talanta 2014, 126, 1-7. (38) Ribeiro, A. S.; Vieira, M. A.; Willie, S.; Sturgeon, R. E. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2007, 388, 849-857. (39) Li, R.; Yan, H.; Yang, X.; Li, Z.; Guo, Y. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2011, 26, 1488-1493. (40) Greda, K.; Jamroz, P.; Pohl, P. J. Anal. At. Spectrom. 2012, 28, 134-141. (41) Guo, X.; Guo, X. Chinese. J. Anal. Chem 1998, 26, 674-678. (42) Vargas-Razo, C.; Tyson, J. F. Fresenius J. Anal. Chem. 2000, 366, 182-190.
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Figure legends and table captions:
2
Figure 1. Schematics diagram of the instrumental setup of the continuous-flow
3
PEVG-AFS.
4
Figure 2. Typical temporal profile of fluorescence signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ (a) and 5
5
µg L-1 Zn2+ (b) by continuous-flow PEVG-AFS. (electrolyte, HCl (pH=3.2); discharge
6
current, 10 mA; Ar gas flow rate, 300 mL min-1; H2 gas flow rate, 50 mL min-1;
7
sample flow rate, 2.5 mL min-1)
8
Figure 3. Effect of the atomizer temperature on the absorption signal of 20 µg L-1
9
Cd2+ and 100 µg L-1 Zn2+ obtained by PEVG-AAS.
10
Figure 4. Effect of different electrode materials on the fluorescence signal intensities
11
of Cd (a);influence of pH (b), and the effect of discharge current (c) on fluorescence
12
signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ and 5 µg L-1 Zn2+.
13
Figure 5. Effect of H2 flow rate (a), Ar flow rate (b), and sample flow rate (c) on the
14
fluorescence signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ and 5 µg L-1 Zn2+.
15 16
Table 1. Influence of concomitant ions on recovery of response from 0.5 µg L-1
17
cadmium and 10 µg L-1 zinc
18
Table 2. Analytical characteristics of element determination with PEVG and other
19
vapor generation techniques
20
Table 3. Analytical results for Cd/Zn determination in certified reference materials
21
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1 2
Figure 1. Schematics diagram of the instrumental setup of the continuous-flow
3
PEVG-AFS.
4 5 6 7
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Figure 2. Typical temporal profile of fluorescence signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ (a) and 5
3
µg L-1 Zn2+ (b) by continuous-flow PEVG-AFS. (electrolyte, HCl (pH=3.2); discharge
4
current, 10 mA; Ar gas flow rate, 300 mL min-1; H2 gas flow rate, 50 mL min-1;
5
sample flow rate, 2.5 mL min-1)
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Figure 3. Effect of the atomizer temperature on the absorption signal of 20 µg L-1
3
Cd2+ and 100 µg L-1 Zn2+ obtained by PEVG-AAS.
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Figure 4. Effect of different electrode materials on the fluorescence signal intensities
3
of Cd(a);influence of pH (b), and the effect of discharge current (c) on fluorescence
4
signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ and 5 µg L-1 Zn2+.
5
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Figure 5. Effect of H2 flow rate (a), Ar flow rate(b), and sample flow rate(c) on the
3
fluorescence signal of 0.2 µg L-1 Cd2+ and 5 µg L-1 Zn2+.
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Table 1. Influence of concomitant ions on recovery of response from 0.5 µg L-1
2
cadmium and 10 µg L-1 zinc Interferences
Concentration -1
Na+ +
K
Cu2+ 2+
Co
Ni2+ Sn2+ 2+
Pb
2+
Zn
Cd2+
Recovery(%)
(mg L )
Cd
Zn
1
97.9 ± 1.5
87.7±2.4
10
17.5 ± 0.3
32.0±1.5
1
99.6 ± 2.5
83.6±4.0
10
21.0 ± 1.7
7.1±0.4
1
98.5 ± 2.1
80.0±2.6
10
70.7 ± 1.5
30.9±1.7
1
106.1 ± 2.5
78.7±3.6
10
41.4 ± 1.0
25.7±4.7
1
100.5 ± 2.9
105.1±4.9
10
18.6 ± 0.7
51.7±4.2
1
98.7 ± 1.7
92.9±4.6
10
79.8 ± 2.0
40.4±3.7
1
102.9 ± 1.9
109.1±4.5
10
96.0 ± 3.4
53.2±1.8
1
103 ± 2.4
—
10
76 ± 2.5
—
1
—
89.0±3.2
10
—
60.2±4.3
3 4
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Table 2. Analytical characteristics of element determination with PEVG and other
2 3
vapor generation techniques VG technique
LOD -Zn
Detector
References
-1
Detector
References
AAS
42
-1
(µg L ) NaBH4 + acid
LOD-Cd (µg L )
2.0
AFS
41
0.016
EcHG
11
AAS
11
0.15
AFS
10
DBD plasma-CVG
0.2
AFS
31
0.03
AFS
29
This work(PEVG)
0.3
AFS
0.003
AFS
4
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Table 3. Analytical results for Cd/Zn determination in certified reference materials Sample GBW07311 (Sediment) GBW07401(Soil)
Element Cd Cd
Certified value -1
Found value -1
2.3 ± 0.2 µg g
2.2 ± 0.1 µg g
-1
Standard addition
-1
4.3 ± 0.4 µg g
4.1 ± 0.2 µg g -1
Method
External calibration -1
GBW10045 (Rice)
Cd
0.19 ± 0.02 µg g
0.20 ± 0.01 µg g
External calibration
GSB 07-1184-2000 (water)
Zn
0.507±0.021 mg L-1
0.493±0.032 mg L-1
External calibration
2 3
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For TOC only
2
3 4 5
Generation of volatile cadmium and zinc species based on plasma electrochemical processes.
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