| Literature DB >> 11348089 |
H Xie1, O C Zafiriou, W Wang, C D Taylor.
Abstract
A simple, robust, low-maintenance method using air-segmented continuous-flow equilibration was developed and automated to measure carbon monoxide (CO) in natural waters precisely and accurately. Finely regulated flows of CO-free air and of seawater or standard water were pumped into a glass coil, forming discrete gas/liquid segments. The partially CO-equilibrated gas effluent was injected into a Trace Analytical reduction analyzer for CO detection. A semiempirical mass-balance model was established for predicting and optimizing the performance of the CO extractor. The optimized gas and water flow rates were approximately 1.2 and approximately 14 mL min(-1), respectively, giving a response time of less than 15 min and a CO-extraction yield of approximately 80%. The analytical blank, precision, and accuracy were, respectively, 0.02 nM, +/-2.5% (at the approximately 1 nM level), and better than 5%. Two extractors can be interfaced to one detector at 4-6 samples per hour for each extractor. Coupled with a continuous surface-water sampler, the system was successfully applied to monitoring the diurnal variation of CO concentration in Sargasso Sea surface waters.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11348089 DOI: 10.1021/es001656v
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Technol ISSN: 0013-936X Impact factor: 9.028