NOAA NST: 132.1: Trace metals in marine animal tissue by neutron activation
Official Method Name
|
Neutron activation for analysis of trace metals in marine animal tissues. |
---|---|
Current Revision
| March 1998 |
Media
|
ANIMAL TISSUE |
Instrumentation
|
Neutron Activation Analysis with Gamma Radiation Detector |
Method Subcategory
|
Inorganic |
Method Source
|
|
Citation
|
Sampling and Analytical Methods of the National Status and Trends Program Mussel Watch Project: 1993-1996 Update. NOAA Technical Memorandum NOS ORCA 130. March 1998. Silver Spring, MD. 233pp. |
Brief Method Summary
|
Sample preparation and analysis methods have been developed and refined that allow accurate and precise determination of major and trace elements in marine animal tissue samples. Sample preparation emphasizes homogenization and total digestion steps that minimize contamination. Analysis includes a full suite of quality assurance samples (emphasis on certified reference materials) in order to produce reliable data. These methods allow measurement of both background and elevated concentrations within NOAA's Status and Trends Program, permitting subtle temporal and spatial differences to be detected. |
Scope and Application
|
This method measures trace metals (at ug / g concentrations) in marine animal tissues. |
Applicable Concentration Range
|
0.1-1000.0 |
Interferences
|
Spectral interferences may be minimized by sample dilution, use of an alternate analyte wavelength, or selective volatilization of the analyte. Non-spectral interferences may be detected and compensated for using the method of standard additions. |
Quality Control Requirements
|
The quality assurance / quality control requirements are initial calibration and continuing calibration checks, method blank analysis, surrogate compound analysis, matrix spike analysis, and reference sample analysis. |
Sample Handling
|
Bivalves are hand-collected and shucked at the lab. Tissues are freeze-dried in Spex jars and homogenized using methacrylate balls in a Spex mixer/mill. |
Maximum Holding Time
|
6 months (frozen) |
Relative Cost
|
$201 to $400 |
Sample Preparation Methods
|
NOAA TM #130 |