posted on 2007-11-30, 16:27authored byMuhammad Haleem Khan, Peter Warwick, Nicholas D.M. Evans
A short, sensitive and reliable spectrophotometric method, which has advantages over
all known “wet chemistry” methods for uranium determination with regard to
tolerance to common interferences, has been developed for the determination of
uranium. Selectivity, molar absorptivity and the determination range of uranium
have been enhanced by using 0.07 % arsenazo-III as a chromogenic reagent. The use
of 3 mol dm-3 perchloric acid as a medium of determination was found to be excellent
in terms of good solvent compatibility on dilution, destruction of organic
contamination and simplicity of operation. The uranium-arsenazo-III complex
formed instantly, and was found to be stable for more than 3 weeks with constant
absorbance. Beer’s law was obeyed up to a uranium concentration of 16 μg g-1, with
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a molar absorptivity at 651 nm of 1.45 x 105 mol-1 dm3 cm -1 at 24 ± 2 °C. Only
phosphate and citrate at 70-fold excess over uranium interfere seriously, whereas
other anions studied could be tolerated up to a 70 fold excess over uranium. Of the
cations studied, only Mn(II), Co(II), Ni(II), Cu(II) and Cr(III) decreased the normal
absorbance of the complex. Iron(III), Ce(III) and Y(III) enhanced the absorbance.
Other cations studied did not affect the absorbance up to a 50 fold excess. The
accuracy was checked by determining uranium from standard solutions in the range
10-50 μg g-1. It was found to be accurate with a 96.0-98.6.% recovery rate. The
method has been successfully applied to standard reference materials and ore samples
at μg g-1 levels.
History
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Chemistry
Citation
KHAN, M.H., WARWICK, P. and EVANS, N., 2006. Spectrophotometric determination of uranium with arsenazo-III in perchloric acid. Chemosphere, 63, 2006, pp. 1165-1169