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Vanadium, analytical methods compounds

Vanadium concentrations in blood, serum or urine are used as a biological indicator of exposure to vanadium. Urine and serum are the specimens with widest application and greatest practicability for monitoring human exposure to vanadium compounds, but urine is preferred as an indicator medium. Blood vanadium appears to be a less sensitive indicator than urinary vanadium, partly because the differences in concentrations are hardly appreciable at low levels of exposure with the analytical methods available (Alessio et al., 1988). [Pg.531]

Detection.—Apart from naturally occurring ores of vanadium, vanadium steels, and ferrovanadium, the commonest compounds of vanadium are those which contain the element in the pentavalent state, viz. the pentoxide and the various vanadates. The analytical reactions usually employed are, therefore, those which apply to vanadates. Most vanadium ores can be prepared for the application of these reactions by digesting with mineral acids or by alkaline fusion with the addition of an oxidising agent. When the silica content is high, preliminary treatment with hydrofluoric acid is recommended. Vanadium steels and bronzes, and ferrovanadium, are decomposed by the methods used for other steels the drillings are, for instance, dissolved in sulphuric acid and any insoluble carbides then taken up in nitric acid, or they are filtered off and submitted to an alkaline fusion. Compounds of lower valency are readily converted into vanadates by oxidation with bromine water, sodium peroxide, or potassium permanganate. [Pg.109]

In the early days of atomic absorption, it was not analytically useful to use flames developing temperatures higher than that of the air-acetylene combination. (This is discussed in more detail in the section on burners.) The temperature of the air-acetylene burner is not suflBcient to dissociate the compounds of refractory elements like titanium, aluminum, and vanadium, and for several years these elements were considered to be out of reach of analytical atomic absorption, though some data could be obtained by special and rather cumbersome methods. [Pg.188]


See other pages where Vanadium, analytical methods compounds is mentioned: [Pg.55]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.134]    [Pg.408]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.46]   


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