Copyright © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Review
Selenium speciation analysis using inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry
Received 28 November 2005;
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Abstract
Selenium exists in several oxidation states and a variety of inorganic and organic compounds, and the chemistry of selenium is complex in both the environment and living systems. Selenium is an essential element at trace levels and toxic at greater levels. Interest in speciation analysis for selenium has grown rapidly in this last decade, especially in the use of chromatographic separation coupled with inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS). Complete characterization of selenium compounds is necessary to understand selenium's significance in metabolic processes, clinical chemistry, biology, toxicology, nutrition and the environment. This review describes some of the essential background of selenium, and more importantly, some of the currently used separation methodologies, both chromatographic and electrophoretic, with emphasis on applications of selenium speciation analysis using ICP-MS detection.
Keywords: Reviews; Inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry; Selenium; Organoselenium compounds
Article Outline
- 1. Introduction: selenium and speciation analysis
- 2. Inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry and basic interfacing
- 2.1. ICP-MS and selenium
- 2.2. Interfacing with ICP-MS
- 2.2.1. HPLC interfacing
- 2.2.2. CE interfacing
- 2.2.3. GC interfacing
- 3. Separation of selenium compounds
- 3.1. HPLC separations of selenium compounds
- 3.1.1. Reversed-phase and ion-pair HPLC
- 3.1.2. Ion-exchange HPLC
- 3.1.3. Size-exclusion HPLC
- 3.1.4. Chiral HPLC
- 3.1.5. Miscellaneous HPLC
- 3.2. Capillary electrophoretic separation
- 3.3. Gas chromatographic separation
- 4. Sample preparation and preservation of selenium species
- 4.1. Sample collection, storage and treatment
- 4.2. Non-volatile species extraction
- 4.2.1. Traditional techniques
- 4.2.2. Enhanced techniques
- 4.3. Volatile species extraction
- 5. Further applications of selenium speciation analysis
- 6. Conclusions and future trends
- Acknowledgements
- References







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