The method is based on catalysed ignition of a sample portion in a flow of oxygen, capture of mercury by an amalgamator and measurement of the mercury vapour's absorbance after thermic release from the amalgamator. Three powdered food samples, a certified reference material (CRM) human hair and a reference material (RM) urine (liquid) were measured in the first range of the instrument (the possible contents determined according to our measurement procedure were 0.0003-0.5 ppm). The calibration function used was a line passing through the origin. The combined standard uncertainties of the mercury determinations were computed from uncertainty components of five quantities: absorbance of the sample, absorbance of the sample blank, slope of the calibration line, correction factor of the abscissa axis, and mass or volume of the sample. The most important uncertainty component is the uncertainty of the sample absorbance measurement which amounts to 52% of the determination uncertainty at the minimum (RM urine) and about 90% at the maximum (in our laboratory homogenized powdered food samples; analysis of variance showed their homogeneity to be insufficient). The results of the CRM and RM analyses do not indicate a significant systematic error for this determination. The relative expanded uncertainty (coefficient was 2) of the determination increases from 9 to 13% for the insufficiently homogenized samples with decreasing mercury content (range of 0.004-0.03 ppm); higher homogeneity of samples results in a decrease of the expanded uncertainty, e.g. 4.6% for the liquid sample (RM urine).
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