Issue 3, 1992

Elemental speciation by liquid chromatography–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry with direct injection nebulization

Abstract

A new version of the direct injection nebulizer (DIN) is used to interface liquid chromatographic (LC) separations with element-selective detection using inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). The DIN injects all of the sample into the ICP and has a dead volume of less than 1 µl. Charged species of arsenic and tin are separated as ion pairs on a micro-scale (1 mm i.d.), packed, reversed-phase column. Detection limits are 0.2–0.6 pg for arsenic and 8–10 pg for tin. For methanol + water eluents, the signal is highest at 25% methanol and stays within 25% of this maximum as the methanol fraction is varied from 20 to 80%. Compared with LC–ICP-MS with conventional nebulizers, the absolute detection limits and chromatographic resolution are substantially superior, and the dependence of analyte signal on solvent composition is somewhat less severe with the DIN.

Article information

Article type
Paper

Analyst, 1992,117, 577-582

Elemental speciation by liquid chromatography–inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry with direct injection nebulization

S. C. K. Shum, R. Neddersen and R. S. Houk, Analyst, 1992, 117, 577 DOI: 10.1039/AN9921700577

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