Title of article :
Determination of methylmercury and estimation of total mercury in seafood using high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) and inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS): Method development and validation Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Susan C. Hight، نويسنده , , John Cheng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
13
From page :
160
To page :
172
Abstract :
A method was developed for determination of methylmercury and estimation of total mercury in seafood. Mercury (Hg) compounds were extracted from 0.5 g edible seafood or 0.2 g lyophilized reference material by adding 50 ml aqueous 1% w/v l-cysteine·HCl·H2O and heating 120 min at 60 °C in glass vials. Hg compounds in 50 μl of filtered extract were separated by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography using a C-18 column and aqueous 0.1% w/v l-cysteine·HCl·H2O + 0.1% w/v l-cysteine mobile phase at room temperature and were detected by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry at mass-to-charge ratio 202. Total Hg was calculated as the mathematical sum of methyl and inorganic Hg determined in extracts. For seafoods containing 0.055–2.78 mg kg−1 methylmercury and 0.014–0.137 mg kg−1 inorganic Hg, precision of analyses was ≤5% relative standard deviation (R.S.D.) for methylmercury and ≤9% R.S.D. for inorganic Hg. Recovery of added analyte was 94% for methylmercury and 98% for inorganic Hg. Methyl and total Hg results for reference materials agreed with certified values. Limits of quantitation were 0.007 mg kg−1 methylmercury and 0.005 mg kg−1 inorganic Hg in edible seafood and 0.017 mg kg−1 methylmercury and 0.012 mg kg−1 inorganic Hg in lyophilized reference materials. Evaluation of analyte stability demonstrated that l-cysteine both stabilized and de-alkylated methylmercury, depending on holding time and cysteine concentration. Polypropylene adversely affected methylmercury stability. Total Hg results determined by this method were equivalent to results determined independently by cold vapour-atomic absorption spectrometry. Methylmercury was the predominant form of Hg in finfish. Ratios of methylmercury/total Hg determined by this method were 93–98% for finfish and 38–48% for mollusks.
Keywords :
Methylmercury , Seafood , Inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry , Total mercury , High performance liquid chromatography
Journal title :
Analytica Chimica Acta
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Analytica Chimica Acta
Record number :
1035879
Link To Document :
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