Strategies for method development for an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer with bandpass reaction cell.: Approaches with different reaction gases for the determination of selenium
dynamic reaction cell;
inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry;
selenium;
trace analysis;
ion molecule reaction;
optimization;
method development;
D O I:
10.1016/S0584-8547(02)00168-4
中图分类号:
O433 [光谱学];
学科分类号:
0703 ;
070302 ;
摘要:
An inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer with dynamic reaction cell (DRC) was used to investigate different approaches for chemical resolution of Ar-2(+) ions and to improve the determination of Se. Hydrogen, methane, oxygen and nitrous oxide were used as reaction gases. The method development for each approach consists of the acquisition of spectra for blank and spiked samples at different operating parameters, including reaction gas flow and transmission settings, of the DRC. Isotope ratio studies and the analytes signal to background ratio (SBR), were used as criteria to determine the operating conditions of the DRC where spectral interferences from the ion source or from polyatomic ions formed inside the DRC are minimized. Methane was found to provide the highest reaction efficiency for determination of Se. Nitrous oxide and oxygen also very efficiently suppress the Ar-2(+) interference but reaction or scattering losses of Se+ and SeO+ are significant. Hydrogen is the least efficient gas for Ar-2(+) reduction but little scattering or reactive loss lead to a good SBR. The determination of Se as SeO+ was investigated with oxygen and nitrous oxide as reaction gases. The efficiency when using the oxygenation reaction was found to be similar to the efficiency for the charge transfer reactions but the slow oxygenation of the potentially interfering Mo+ renders this approach less useful for analytical purposes. Using a natural water sample it could be shown that very good agreement is obtained using methane or hydrogen for analysis of Se-80(+) at the mug/1 level. Limits of detection are lowest (2 ng/l) when methane is used to suppress the Ar-2(+) ion and when Se-80(+) is used for analysis. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.