How could we measure ANC?
Download
Report
Transcript How could we measure ANC?
Phosphorus Measurements
The
Technique
Detection Limits
Wallastonite
Ascorbic Acid Technique
Ammonium
molybdate and antimony
potassium tartrate react in an acid medium
with orthophosphate-phosphorus to form an
antimony-phospho-molybdate complex.
This complex is reduced to an intensely
blue-colored complex by ascorbic acid.
The reaction is slow and the complex is not
stable and thus analysis must be performed
after 10 minutes and before 30 minutes.
Interference
Barium,
lead, and silver interfere by
forming a precipitate.
The interference from silica, which forms a
pale-blue complex is small and can usually
be considered negligible.
Arsenate is determined similarly to
phosphorus and should be considered when
present in concentrations higher than
phosphorus.
Sample Preparation
No
pretreatment
Measures
Sulfuric
acid treatment
Measures
Persulfate
All
orthophosphates
hydrolyzable and orthophosphates
digestion (strong oxidant)
phosphorus converted to orthophosphates
Measures total phosphorus
Detection Limits
What
controls our ability to measure small
concentrations of phosphorus?
How
could we determine if the answer we
get is meaningful?
analytical range is 10 mg/L to 1
mg/L as phosphorus
Expected
Types of Detection Limits
Instrument
detection limit (IDL)
instrument
Method
noise
detection limit (MDL)
instrument
noise
sample preparation
Practical
Which dominates?
quantitation limit (PQL)
routinely
achievable detection limit with
reasonable assurance that any reported value
greater than the PQL is reliable
5 times MDL
Instrument Noise for a
Spectrophotometer
What
measurements are involved in
obtaining a concentration reading from a
spectrophotometer?
Reference (P0)
_____________
Lamp intensity
_________________________________
Absorbance of reference solution
_________________________________
Absorbance of cuvette
_____________
Standards
sample preparation
_____________
Sample
_____________
What are the limitations at low
concentrations?
Po
- _________
Reference light intensity
P light intensity after passing through
sample
Po
A log = bc
As C 0 P __
P0
P
Describe the journey after light leaves
sample to computer
______________________________________
Photons strike diode and produce a voltage response
___________________
Voltage is digitized
Digital Calculations → absorbance
________________________________
Minimum Detectable Absorbance
Suppose
a 12 bit Analog to Digital
Converter is used. What is the smallest
absorbance that can be measured?
12 bit ( 212) means _____
4096 intervals
A log
Po
P
= bc
212
0.00011
A log
12
2 1
What if P0 is digitized into 200 intervals?
200
A log
0.0022
199
Additional Instrument
Limitations
Differences
in ___________
Cuvettes
Fluctuations in ______
Lamp intensity
Power
supply
Warm up time
Repeatability
of Cuvette ___________
alignment
Sample carryover if using sipper cell
Method Detection Limit
"Method
detection limit" is the smallest
concentration that can be detected above the
noise in a procedure and within a stated
confidence level.
What is C such that I can be 99% confident
that C > 0?
Measuring the MDL
Make
a standard that is near the MDL
Divide it into at least 7 portions.
Process each portions through all sample
preparation and analysis steps
Calculate the MDL using the equation
MDL st n1,
n is the sample size, s is the standard deviation,
=0.01 is generally the required confidence,
t is the student t distribution
Is the MDL > IDL?
Are
sample preparation errors significant?
Variability in reagent blank (reference
sample)
Results
in a calibration curve with nonzero
intercept
Sample
Ultra
contamination
pure water
Acid washed plastic or glass ware
Airborne contamination
Decreasing the IDL
May
or may not decrease the MDL
How can you improve an estimate of a
parameter?
Use more ________!
diodes
How could you use a section of the
spectrum?
extinction
standards to determine _________
________ array
______
coefficient
Take an average of all the predicted
concentrations?
Use
Arrays!
ε
c
A
bc
A
bε
Maximum Detection Limit
Chemistry
reagent
limitations (stoichiometry)
reaction by-products
Instrument
limitations
Maximum detection limits are easily
surmounted by __________
dilution
Wallastonite
Wallastonite
(calcium metasilicate mixed
with ferrous and aluminum metasilicate)
tailings can be used to effectively remove
phosphorus from solution.
These tailings are waste products generated
during wallastonite ore mining in Northern
New York.
Wallastonite Column Results
Why
Fraction of P Removal
are long
retention times
needed?
What is the
mechanism?
5 mg phosphorus/L influent
1.00
0.90
0.80
0.70
0.60
0.50
0.40
0.30
0.20
0.10
0.00
Arst, Gifford, Smith
Goehring, et al
0
20
40
60
Retention time (hours)
80
Wallastonite Research (Proposal)
Quantify
phosphorus removal as a function
of time in batch tests
Phosphorus concentration (100 mg/L)
Wallastonite concentrations (0, 10, 30, 100,
300, 1000) mg per 7 mL phosphorus
solution
Batch contact times (1, 5, 15, 30, 60, 90)
minutes
Expectations
fraction remaining
1
0.8
0.6
0 (mg/5 mL)
10 (mg/5 mL)
30 (mg/5 mL)
100 (mg/5 mL)
300 (mg/5 mL)
1000 (mg/5 mL)
0.4
0.2
0
0
20
40
60
time (minutes)
80
100
Prelab
You
will be creating 1 mL standards by
diluting a stock of 100 mg P/L (1, 3, 10, 30,
100 mg P/L)
Reagent dilution problem
Spectral Analysis
The initial extinction coefficient arrays are obtained
from the slope of the linear regression line for A(l) =
f(c)
Uses general least squares regression to add multiples
of extinction coefficient arrays for each component to
obtain the best curve fit for the sample
A better estimate of the extinction coefficient is
obtained by interpolating between adjacent standards
Repeat least squares regression analysis