Artigo Revisado por pares

Assessment of airborne platinum contamination via ICP-mass spectrometric analysis of tree bark

2001; Royal Society of Chemistry; Volume: 16; Issue: 9 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1039/b102940c

ISSN

1364-5544

Autores

Renli Ma, Ian Staton, Cameron W. McLeod, M. B. Gómez, M. Milagros Gómez-Gómez, M. A. Palacios,

Tópico(s)

Air Quality and Health Impacts

Resumo

Tree bark is used as a passive bio-monitor to assess the environmental impact by the use of automotive catalysts containing platinum-group elements. Pt in bark samples collected from UK, Spain, Japan and USA was determined by ICP-MS both conventionally after acid digestion and directly utilising laser ablation. An ultrasonic nebuliser equipped with a membrane desolvator was employed for digest analysis, to improve the sensitivity (limit of detection, 0.8 ng l−1) and to eliminate the potential spectral interference caused by hafnium oxide. Pt concentrations found in the remote sites were below 9 ng g−1. Similar concentrations were obtained for Spanish/UK cities with occasionally slightly elevated values. In contrast, the concentrations for bark samples in major Japanese/US cities ranged up to 38 ng g−1. The data are consistent with the usage of Pt-containing automotive catalysts in the respective sites. Spatial micro-analytical data, acquired on raw bark materials, indicate that Pt occurred in a highly dispersed particulate form and was not readily transformed/solubilised by actions of weathering. Association of Pt with Pd and/or Rh (no correlation with Pb was observed) suggests that the particles detected originated from automotive catalysts.

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