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[en] Full text: Sample preparation has long been the bottleneck of environmental analysis for both total and species specific analysis. Digestion, extraction and preparation of the analytes are relying on a series of chemical reactions. The introduction of microwave assisted sample preparation has first been viewed as a mean to accelerate the kinetics of digestion of the matrix for total elements and fast samples preparation procedures. However, the extensive development and success of microwave digestion procedures in total elemental analysis has now allowed to have a larger insight of the perspectives offered by this technique. Microwave technologies now offer to have a precise control of the temperature and indirectly control the reaction kinetics taking place during the sample preparation procedures. Microwave assisted chemistry permits to perform simultaneously the fundamental steps required for metal species extraction and derivatization. The number of sample preparation steps used for organotin or organomercury species have been reduced to one and the total time of sample preparation brought down for a few hours to some minutes. Further, the developments of GC/ICP/MS techniques allow to routinely use speciated isotopic dilution methods has internal probe of the chemical reactions. These new approaches allow us to use the addition of the labeled species for isotopic dilution as a mean to evaluate and follow the chemical processes taking place during the extraction procedure. These procedures will help us to understand and check for the stability of the analytes during the chemistry of the sample preparation procedure and bring some insights of the chemistry taking place during the extraction. Understanding the different mechanisms involved in the sample preparation steps will allow us in return to further improve all theses procedures and bring us to the horizon of 'on-line sample preparation and detection'. (author)
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Wenzl, T.; Eberl, M.; Zischka, M.; Knapp, G. (eds.); Institute for Analytical Chemistry, Micro- and Radiochemistry, Graz University of Technology (Austria). Funding organisation: Agilent Technologies (Austria); Anton Paar GmbH (Austria); Berghof Laborprodukte GmbH (Germany); CEM International (Germany); Dionex GmbH (Germany); Graz University of Technology (Austria); Milestone Corporation (Italy); Personal Chemistry Company (Germany); Sigma Aldrich GmbH (Austria); Waters GmbH (Austria); 70 p; 2002; p. 41; TRISP 2002: Trends in sample preparation 2002; Seggau (Austria); 30 Jun - 3 Jul 2002; Available in abstract form only, full text entered in this record
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