Titrimetric determination of uranium in low-grade ores by the ferrous ion-phosphoric acid reduction method

Talanta ◽  
1980 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 383-389 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Hitchen
1957 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 482-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshiyasu Kiba ◽  
Ikuko Akaza ◽  
née Kishi ◽  
Sachiko Taki

1975 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
John W Nelson ◽  
K K Batra

Abstract We describe an automated colorimetric method for determination of uric acid in serum or urine by use of an AutoAnalyzer II or SMA 12/60 (Technicon Corp.). The method depends on reduction of a ferric-phenanthroline complex by uric acid under acidic conditions to a ferrous-phenanthroline complex, which absorbs at 505 nm. Advantages of this method over other methods now in use are that color and concentration are linearly related (to 20 mg/100 ml); aqueous reagents are easily prepared, stable, and inexpensive; and interference from ascorbic acid has been eliminated by use of an alkaline copper-containing diluent. The analysis is also free of interference from glucose, creatinine, glutathione, salicylates and hemoglobin. Correlation with results of the Technicon phosphotungstic acid reduction method is excellent (r = .996). Correlation with results of an automated uricase method is satisfactory (r = .979). Recovery of uric acid was 101% over a wide concentration range.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1380 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bao Shenxu ◽  
Zhang Yimin ◽  
Hang Jing ◽  
Yang Xiao ◽  
Hu Yangjia

ABSTRACTStone coal is an important vanadium-bearing resource in China. Most vanadium exists in stone coal as V(III), which is stable and not easily to be extracted. The V(III) should be oxidized to V(IV) and/or V(V) by roasting with additives at high temperature and then extracted by acid leaching and/or water leaching. Hence, the vanadium valency in roasted stone coal can reflect the roasting efficiency and leaching rate. In traditional digestion process, the V(V) can oxidize V(III) in solution and this causes great error to the determination of vanadium valency. In this study, the V(IV) and V(V) in roasted stone coal is dissolved firstly in 5% of hydrochloric acid at room temperature for 1h because the V(III) embedded in crystal lattice can not dissolve in dilute acid. The acid solution containing V(IV) and V(V) is titrated by 0.02 M ammonium ferrous sulfate (AFS), and the jump in titration curve indicates the reducing of V(V) to V(IV) by ferrous ion. The volume of V(V) can be calculated according to the consumption of AFS. The total volume of vanadium can be determined by potassium permanganate oxidation-ammonium ferrous sulfate titrimetric method. Hence, the volume of V(IV) can be obtained by deducting the quantity of V(V) from the total vanadium. Secondly, the undissolved residue is digested in Teflon vessel by phosphoric acid and hydrofluoric acid at 90 °C for 2h. The digestion solution is also titrated by AFS under nitrogen atmosphere, and the jump in titration curve denotes the reducing of V(IV) to V(III) by ferrous ion in phosphoric acid medium. So, the volume of V(III) and V(IV) can be obtained in the same way. This method is characterized by high measuring accuracy and excellent reproducibility.


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