An isotope dilution (ID) procedure for the determination of methylmercury (MMHg) in biological samples using an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer as detector after the capillary gas chromatographic separation (CGC/ICPMS) has been developed. For the first time, open-focused-microwave pretreatment has been used in conjunction with ID. Optimum conditions for the measurement of isotope ratios on the fast transient chromatographic peaks have been established. Mass bias was found to be about 1.5%/mass unit and was corrected by using the simultaneously measured thallium signals at 203Tl and 205Tl. After mass-bias correction, deviation of the theoretical mercury ratio values was found to be as low as 0.2%. Isotope ratio precisions based on the peak areas measurements were 0.3% RSD for 20 pg injected (as Hg absolute). The absolute detection limits were in the range of 20-30 fg for 202Hg and 201Hg. Methylmercury enriched in 201Hg has been synthesized by direct reaction with methylcobalamine. The concentration of the MMHg spike has been measured by reverse isotope dilution with a natural MMHg standard. The capabilities of CGC/ICPMS to measure isotope ratios were used to optimize sample derivatization by aqueous ethylation with NaBEt4 with respect to MMHg degradation pathways and quantitative recovery. The accuracy of the method developed has been validated with biological certified reference materials (CRM-463, DORM-1).
Speciated isotope-dilution mass spectrometry (SID-MS) is claimed to be an absolute method; however, it has been found to be affected by artifact monomethylmercury (MMHg) formation in sediments. The determination of MMHg in sediments was carried out by SID-MS after open-focused microwave extraction. The extracted mercury species were then ethylated and separated by capillary gas chromatography (CGC). Isotope ratios (peak area ratios at different masses) were measured by on-line ICP-MS detection of the CGC-separated compounds. Reproducibility of 202Hg/201Hg isotope ratio measurements were 0.60% for MeEtHg and 0.69% for Et2Hg; for 202Hg/199Hg, 0.43 and 0.46%, respectively, were determined. The absolute detection limits for CGC-ICPMS measurements were better than 26 fg for 202Hg, 20 fg for 201Hg, and 24 fg for 199Hg. For the direct determination of MMHg in sediment reference materials (CRM 580, IAEA 356, and IAEA 405), higher values than the certified were always found. Systematic experiments were carried out to localize the sources of the unintentional abiotic methylmercury formation during analysis. Different spiking and derivatization procedures (either ethylation, propylation, or derivatization by Grignard reagents) were tested. In addition, isotopically enriched inorganic mercury was spiked. The amount of inorganic mercury initially present in the sample was found to be the critical factor that should be known and carefully controlled. A simple solvent extraction technique involving no critical cleanup steps was applied in order to reduce high Hg2+ amounts. The method was applied to the determination of MMHg in sediment reference material IAEA-405 with satisfactory results after organic solvent extraction. The limitations of applicability of the proposed method are evaluated as related to inorganic mercury, organic carbon, and sulfur contents. The results obtained confirmed that available sediment reference materials are adequate to achieve traceable mercury speciation analysis and to detect potential sources of MMHg artifact formation.
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