RI 3639 Determination by the Dropping-Mercury-Electrode Procedure of Lead, Cadmium, and Zinc In Samples Collected in Industrial-Hygiene Studies

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Florence L. Feicht H. H. Schrenk Carlton E. Brown
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
30
File Size:
22054 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 1942

Abstract

This report describes the dropping - mercury electrode , its use in analysis , and the procedure of the Health Division of the Bureau of Mines in determining lead , cadmium , and zinc . The dropping - mercury electrode or polarograph is an electrolytic device , one electrode of which consists of mercury issuing in small drops from a capillary tube . Such electrodes have been in existence for more than 50 years, but they were not used for analytical purposes until about 1922.6/ Developments since have been rapid , especially in Czechoslovakia , Germany , Italy, and Japan and more recently in the United States . A recent bibliography / contains references to, 825 articles issued from 1903 through 1940. In 1939 Kolthoff and Lingane presented the first comprehensive critical review, in English , of the device and its use in analysis . They have recently issued a book on the same subject. Similar information also is included in a recent book10/ by Kolthoff and Laitinen . Much of the information in this and the two following sections on this device and its use in analysis was obtained from these three publications . The use of the dropping - mercury electrode in analysis is based upon the fact that the kind and amount of electro - reducible and electro - oxidizable constituents in solution can be determined from the current -voltage relationships revealed by this electrode or electrolytic device .
Citation

APA: Florence L. Feicht H. H. Schrenk Carlton E. Brown  (1942)  RI 3639 Determination by the Dropping-Mercury-Electrode Procedure of Lead, Cadmium, and Zinc In Samples Collected in Industrial-Hygiene Studies

MLA: Florence L. Feicht H. H. Schrenk Carlton E. Brown RI 3639 Determination by the Dropping-Mercury-Electrode Procedure of Lead, Cadmium, and Zinc In Samples Collected in Industrial-Hygiene Studies. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1942.

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