USGS-NWQL: I-7800:  Strontium, suspended recoverable, atomic absorption spectrometric

  • Summary
  • Analytes
  • Revision
  • Data and Sites
Official Method Name
Strontium, atomic absorption spectrometric, direct
Current Revision
1972
Media
WATER
Instrumentation
Flame Atomic Absorption
Method Subcategory
Inorganic
Method Source
  USGS-NWQL
Citation
Methods for the Determination of Inorganic Substances in Water and Fluvial Sediments, Techniques of Water-Resources Investigations of the United States Geological Survey, Book 5, Chapter A1 Edited by Marvin J. Fishman and Linda C. Friedman
Brief Method Summary
Strontium is determined by atomic absorption spectrometry. Lanthanum chloride and excess potassium chloride are added to mask interferences and control ionization of strontium in the flame (Fishman and Downs, 1966). This procedure may be automated by the addition of a sampler, a proportioning pump, and a strip-chart recorder or a printer or both (fig. 1).
Scope and Application
This method may be used to analyze water, brines, and water-suspended sediment containing from 10 to 5,000 ug/L of strontium. Samples containing more than 5,000 ug/L need to be diluted.
Suspended recoverable strontium is calculated by subtracting dissolved strontium from total recoverable strontium.
Total recoverable strontium in water-suspended sediment needs to undergo preliminary digestion-solubilization by method I-3485.
Samples containing more than 2,500 mg/L of total solutes need first to be diluted. If the strontium concentration in the diluted sample is below detection, the undiluted sample needs to be analyzed by the standard-addition method.
Applicable Concentration Range
NA
Interferences
Sodium and potassium decrease the strontium ionization in the flame. To control the ionization, 1,000 mg/L of potassium are added to both standards and samples.
Aluminum, phosphate, and silica interfere but are masked by the addition of lanthanum.
Nitrate interferes, but in the presence of lanthanum chloride-potassium chloride solution at least 2,000 mg/L can be tolerated. The addition of nitric acid in the field to preserve samples causes no problem.
Low strontium values result even in the presence of potassium and lanthanum if the dissolved-solids concentration exceeds 2,500 mg/L. For this reason, brines and highly mineralized waters must either be diluted or analyzed by the standard-addition method. For the standard-addition method, the dissolved solids content of the samples must be reduced to less than 20,000 mg/L.
Quality Control Requirements
No QC requirements. Suspended recoverable strontium is a calculation.
Sample Handling
NA
Maximum Holding Time
NA
Relative Cost
Less than $50
Sample Preparation Methods