Volume 387, Number 7, 2411-2417, DOI: 10.1007/s00216-006-0928-x

A theoretical framework for evaluating analytical digestion methods for poorly soluble particulate beryllium

Aleksandr B. Stefaniak, Christopher A. Brink, Robert M. Dickerson, Gregory A. Day, Michael J. Brisson, Mark D. Hoover and Ronald C. Scripsick

From the issue entitled "Biological and Environmental Reference Materials (BERM 10)"

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Abstract

Complete digestion of all chemical forms and sizes of particulate analytes in environmental samples is usually necessary to obtain accurate results with atomic spectroscopy. In the current study, we investigate the physicochemical properties of beryllium particles likely to be encountered in samples collected from different occupational environments and present a hypothesis that a dissolution theory can be used as a conceptual framework to guide development of strategies for digestion procedures. For monodisperse single-chemical constituent primary particles, such as those encountered when handling some types of beryllium oxide (BeO) powder, theory predicts that a digestion procedure is sufficient when it completely dissolves all primary particles, independent of cluster size. For polydisperse single-chemical constituent particles, such as those encountered during the handling of some types of beryllium metal powder, theory predicts that a digestion procedure is sufficient only when it completely dissolves the largest particle in the sample. For samples with unknown or multi-chemical constituent particles and with particles having undefined sizes, e.g., fume emissions from a copper–beryllium alloy furnace operation or dust from a beryl ore crushing operation, a surface area-limited and single-constituent-dependent dissolution theory may not predict complete dissolution, thereby requiring non-routine robust treatment procedures with post-digestion filtration, followed by examination of residual particulate material. Additionally, for beryllium, and likely other poorly soluble materials, particulate reference materials of various chemical forms and size distributions are needed to better evaluate and harmonize analytical digestion procedures.
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Figure Generation of aerosol particles during machining of beryllium oxide

Keywords  Analytical methods - Beryllium compounds - Quantitative analysis

The findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health.

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