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Supplementary information files for Concurrent measurement of nitrate and ammonium in water and soil samples using ion‐selective electrodes: tackling sensitivity and precision issues

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posted on 2021-03-30, 13:13 authored by Tolulope Fayose, Ellen Thomas, Tanja RaduTanja Radu, Peter Dillingham, Sami Ullah, Aleksandar Radu
Supplementary files for article Concurrent measurement of nitrate and ammonium in water and soil samples using ion‐selective electrodes: tackling sensitivity and precision issues. In this paper, we demonstrate the suitability, sensitivity, and precision of low‐cost and easy‐to‐use ion‐selective electrodes (ISEs) for concurrent detection of NH4+ and NO3 in soil and water by technical and non‐technical end‐users to enable efficient soil and water management exposed to chronic reactive nitrogen loading. We developed a simplified methodology for sample preparation followed by the demonstration of an analytical methodology resulting in improvements of sensitivity and precision of ISEs. Herein, we compared and contrasted ISEs with traditional laboratory‐based technique such as Flow Injection Analysis (FIA) and portable colorimetric assay followed by comparisons of linear regression and Bayesian nonlinear calibration approaches applied on both direct potentiometry and standard addition modes of analysis in terms of in‐field applications and improvement of sensitivity and precision. The ISEs were validated for sensing on a range of ambient soil and water samples representing a range of NH4+ and NO3 concentrations from pristine to excessive saturation conditions. Herein developed methodology showed excellent agreement with lab‐based and portable analytical techniques while demonstrating improvements in precision and sensitivity analysis illustrated by a decrease in confidence intervals by 50‐60%. We also demonstrated the utilization of the entire ISE response curve thus removing the biases originating from linear approximation which is often currently employed. Therefore, we show that ISEs are robust yet low cost and an easy to use technology that can enable high‐frequency measurement of mineral N and help to improve our understanding of N transformation processes as influenced by soil management, fertilization, land use, and climate change.

Funding

British Council (413876777)

Large Area Distributed Real Time Soil (DiRTS) Monitoring

Natural Environment Research Council

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RSC Analytical Chemistry Research Trust (ACSS 17/014)

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