Investigation of Water Safety in Non-treated Drinking Water with Trace Toxic Metals.
- Author:
Suw Young LY
1
;
Dae Hong KIM
;
Ga Eun LEE
Author Information
1. Biosensor Research Institute, Seoul National University of Science and Technology, Seoul, Korea. suwyoung@snut.ac.kr
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Trace;
Toxic metal;
Voltammetry;
Copper;
Diagnosis
- MeSH:
Convection;
Copper;
Diagnosis;
Drinking Water*;
Drinking*;
Electrodes;
Graphite;
Limit of Detection;
Metals*;
Nanotubes, Carbon;
Organothiophosphorus Compounds;
Reference Standards;
Drinking Water
- From:Toxicological Research
2013;29(3):211-215
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
The trace toxic metal copper was assayed using mercury immobilized on a carbon nanotube electrode (MCW), with a graphite counter and a reference electrode. In this study, a macro-scale convection motor was interfaced with a MCW three-electrode system, in which a handmade MCW was optimized using cyclic-and square-wave stripping voltammetry. An analytical electrolyte for tap water was used instead of an expensive acid or base ionic solution. Under these conditions, optimum parameters were 0.09 V amplitude, 40 Hz frequency, 0.01 V incremental potential, and a 60-s accumulation time. A diagnostic working curve was obtained from 50.0 to 350 microg/L. At a constant Cu(II) concentration of 10.0 microg/L, the statistical relative standard deviation was 1.78% (RSD, n = 15), the analytical accumulation time was only 60 s, and the analytical detection limit approached 4.6 microg/L (signal/noise = 3). The results were applied to non-treated drinking water. The content of the analyzed copper using 9.0 and 4.0 microg/L standards were 8.68 microg/L and 3.96 microg/L; statistical values R2 = 0.9987 and R2 = 0.9534, respectively. This method is applicable to biological diagnostics or food surveys.