| Literature DB >> 26832984 |
Jiapeng Wu1,2, Yiguo Hong1, Fengjie Guan3, Yan Wang1,2, Yehui Tan4, Weizhong Yue1, Meilin Wu1, Liying Bin3, Jiaping Wang3, Jiali Wen3.
Abstract
The well-known zinc-cadmium reduction method is frequently used for determination of nitrate. However, this method is seldom to be applied on field research of nitrate due to the long time consuming and large sample volume demand. Here, we reported a modified zinc-cadmium reduction method (MZCRM) for measurement of nitrate at natural-abundance level in both seawater and freshwater. The main improvements of MZCRM include using small volume disposable tubes for reaction, a vortex apparatus for shaking to increase reduction rate, and a microplate reader for high-throughput spectrophotometric measurements. Considering salt effect, two salinity sections (5~10 psu and 20~35 psu) were set up for more accurate determination of nitrate in low and high salinity condition respectively. Under optimized experimental conditions, the reduction rates were stabilized on 72% and 63% on the salinity of 5 and 20 psu respectively. The lowest detection limit for nitrate was 0.5 μM and was linear up to 100 μM (RSDs was 4.8%). Environmental samples assay demonstrated that MZCRM was well consistent with conventional zinc-cadmium reduction method. In total, this modified method improved accuracy and efficiency of operations greatly, and would be realized a rapid and high-throughput determination of nitrate in field analysis of nitrate with low cost.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26832984 PMCID: PMC4735594 DOI: 10.1038/srep20165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Effect of salinity on nitrate reduction rate.
Artificial seawater of varying salinity (0–35 psu) containing 5 μM and 10 μM nitrate were used as standards, respectively. Error bars represent standard deviation from a triplicate sampling analysis.
Figure 2Effect of reduction time (min) on nitrate reduction rate.
Both 5 μM and 10 μM nitrate were used at salinity of 5 psu (A) and salinity of 20 psu (B).
Figure 3Effect of zinc sheet area (cm2) on nitrate reduction.
Both 5 μM and 10 μM nitrate were used at salinity of 5 psu (A) and salinity of 20 psu (B) in these experiments.
Figure 4Standard calibration curve under optimal condition.
(A) 0.5–100 μM, (B) 0.5–16 μM.
Figure 5Comparison of the proposed method and reference method.
(A) samples from South China Sea; (B) samples from Pearl River Estuary.
Error analysis among the low (5–10 psu) and high (20–35 psu) section method using two different salinity samples.
| Nitrate concentration (μM) | 2.08 | 2.48 | 2.00 | 1.65 |
| Matrix salinity | 5 | 30 | ||
| Std | 0.29 | 0.25 | ||
| RSDs (%) | 13 | 14 | ||
Figure 6The general procedure of rapid and high-throughput microplate spectrophotometric method for determination of nitrate.