Literature DB >> 12542298

Evaluation and testing of analytical methods for cyanide species in municipal and industrial contaminated waters.

Anping Zheng1, David A Dzomba, Richard G Luthy, Bernard Sawyer, William Lazouskas, Prakasam Tata, Michael F Delaney, Larissa Zilitinkevitch, John R Sebroski, Rebecca S Swartling, Sharon M Drop, John M Flaherty.   

Abstract

Total cyanide analysis by distillation is used most commonly to assess cyanide content of water samples. This manual method is robust but slow and provides no information about cyanide speciation, a significant limitation in that cyanide species have substantially different toxicity characteristics. Seven alternative methods for the analysis of cyanide species or groups of species were evaluated in reagent water and five different contaminated water matrices, including five species-specific methods--weak acid dissociable (WAD) cyanide, free cyanide by microdiffusion, available cyanide, automated WAD cyanide by thin film distillation, metal cyanides by ion chromatography--and two automated techniques for total cyanide--total cyanide bythin film distillation and total cyanide by low-power UV digestion. The species-specific cyanide analytical techniques achieved low, ppb-level detection limits and exhibited satisfactory accuracy and precision for most contaminated waters. Analysis of low concentrations of cyanide species in raw wastewater was problematical for the available cyanide and ion chromatography methods, which experienced significant interference problems and/or low recoveries. There was recovery of significant diffusible cyanide in microdiffusion tests with nickel-cyanide-spiked samples, reflecting dissociation of this weak metal-cyanide complex during the test and demonstrating that the test can recover some fraction of WAD cyanide in addition to free cyanide. The automated total cyanide methods, which involve UV digestion, achieved low detection limits for most waters but exhibited low recoveries for some waters.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12542298     DOI: 10.1021/es0258273

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  3 in total

1.  Isolation of a strain of Aspergillus fumigatus able to grow in minimal medium added with an industrial cyanide waste.

Authors:  Luigia Sabatini; Claudio Ferrini; Mauro Micheloni; Anna Pianetti; Barbara Citterio; Chiara Parlani; Francesca Bruscolini
Journal:  World J Microbiol Biotechnol       Date:  2011-06-10       Impact factor: 3.312

2.  Monitoring of river water for free cyanide pollution from mining activity in Papua New Guinea and attenuation of cyanide by biochar.

Authors:  Ian Sawaraba; B K Rajashekhar Rao
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2014-12-03       Impact factor: 2.513

3.  Cobalt metal-mixed organic complex-based hybrid micromaterials: ratiometric detection of cyanide.

Authors:  Hai-Bo Liu; He-Song Han; Bin Lan; Dong-Mei Xiao; Jing Liang; Zi-Ying Zhang; Jing Wang
Journal:  RSC Adv       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 3.361

  3 in total

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