TY - JOUR
T1 - Preconcentration strategies for trace metals including REEs in seawater and porewater by employing commercial chelating resin – A review
AU - Julian Haryanto, Michael
AU - Zhang, Jing
AU - Kagaya, Shigehiro
AU - Horikawa, Keiji
AU - Shamsun Nahar, Mst
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)
PY - 2024/11
Y1 - 2024/11
N2 - Trace metals, including Rare Earth Elements (REEs), have been widely used in oceanography, acting as tracers to evaluate biogeochemical cycles, water mass transport, rock-water interaction, and external input or deposition. However, a reliable and reproducible determination is still challenging due to many factors, especially matrix effects from seawater matrices (seawater and porewater). Since trace element determination in seawater matrices is still not a routine procedure, the ongoing analytical development in this field has thus eventually attracted both analytical and marine geochemistry communities. Therefore, this paper reviews analytical methods, major challenges, calibration strategies, and future outlooks for trace elements preconcentration in seawater matrices using various commercially available chelating resins. It is known that there has been a move towards sample treatment simplification, a wide range of operating pH and sample matrices, onboard preconcentration, and simultaneous multielement (trace metals including REEs) analysis, demonstrating that there are still emerging analytical and environmental chemistry issues related to this field.
AB - Trace metals, including Rare Earth Elements (REEs), have been widely used in oceanography, acting as tracers to evaluate biogeochemical cycles, water mass transport, rock-water interaction, and external input or deposition. However, a reliable and reproducible determination is still challenging due to many factors, especially matrix effects from seawater matrices (seawater and porewater). Since trace element determination in seawater matrices is still not a routine procedure, the ongoing analytical development in this field has thus eventually attracted both analytical and marine geochemistry communities. Therefore, this paper reviews analytical methods, major challenges, calibration strategies, and future outlooks for trace elements preconcentration in seawater matrices using various commercially available chelating resins. It is known that there has been a move towards sample treatment simplification, a wide range of operating pH and sample matrices, onboard preconcentration, and simultaneous multielement (trace metals including REEs) analysis, demonstrating that there are still emerging analytical and environmental chemistry issues related to this field.
KW - GEOTRACES
KW - ICP-MS
KW - Preconcentration
KW - REEs
KW - Seawater matrices
KW - Trace metals
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202940781&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.microc.2024.111526
DO - 10.1016/j.microc.2024.111526
M3 - 総説
AN - SCOPUS:85202940781
SN - 0026-265X
VL - 206
JO - Microchemical Journal
JF - Microchemical Journal
M1 - 111526
ER -