Radial line-scans as representative sampling strategy in dried-droplet laser ablation of liquid samples deposited on pre-cut filter paper disks

Nebulising liquid samples and using the aerosol thus obtained for further analysis is the standard method in many current analytical techniques, also with inductively coupled plasma (ICP)-based devices. With such a set-up, quantification via external calibration is usually straightforward for sample...

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Veröffentlicht in:Spectrochimica acta. Part B: Atomic spectroscopy 2014-11, Vol.101, p.123-129
Hauptverfasser: Nischkauer, Winfried, Vanhaecke, Frank, Bernacchi, Sébastien, Herwig, Christoph, Limbeck, Andreas
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container_title Spectrochimica acta. Part B: Atomic spectroscopy
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creator Nischkauer, Winfried
Vanhaecke, Frank
Bernacchi, Sébastien
Herwig, Christoph
Limbeck, Andreas
description Nebulising liquid samples and using the aerosol thus obtained for further analysis is the standard method in many current analytical techniques, also with inductively coupled plasma (ICP)-based devices. With such a set-up, quantification via external calibration is usually straightforward for samples with aqueous or close-to-aqueous matrix composition. However, there is a variety of more complex samples. Such samples can be found in medical, biological, technological and industrial contexts and can range from body fluids, like blood or urine, to fuel additives or fermentation broths. Specialized nebulizer systems or careful digestion and dilution are required to tackle such demanding sample matrices. One alternative approach is to convert the liquid into a dried solid and to use laser ablation for sample introduction. Up to now, this approach required the application of internal standards or matrix-adjusted calibration due to matrix effects. In this contribution, we show a way to circumvent these matrix effects while using simple external calibration for quantification. The principle of representative sampling that we propose uses radial line-scans across the dried residue. This compensates for centro-symmetric inhomogeneities typically observed in dried spots. The effectiveness of the proposed sampling strategy is exemplified via the determination of phosphorus in biochemical fermentation media. However, the universal viability of the presented measurement protocol is postulated. Detection limits using laser ablation-ICP-optical emission spectrometry were in the order of 40μgmL−1 with a reproducibility of 10 % relative standard deviation (n=4, concentration=10 times the quantification limit). The reported sensitivity is fit-for-purpose in the biochemical context described here, but could be improved using ICP-mass spectrometry, if future analytical tasks would require it. Trueness of the proposed method was investigated by cross-validation with conventional liquid measurements, and by analyzing IAEA-153 reference material (Trace Elements in Milk Powder); a good agreement with the certified value for phosphorus was obtained. •Sample preparation via deposition of liquids on pre-cut filter disks.•Sample introduction via laser ablation of dried filters.•Representative sampling avoids bias.•Signal quantification via external calibration and aqueous standard solutions.•Alternative approach for quantifying P in challenging matrix.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.sab.2014.07.023
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Biochemical fermentation
Biochemistry
Calibration
dried-droplet quantification
Fermentation
ICP-OES
Laser ablation
Liquids
Phosphorus
Sampling
Spectrometry
Strategy
title Radial line-scans as representative sampling strategy in dried-droplet laser ablation of liquid samples deposited on pre-cut filter paper disks
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