Suspended particulate matter: Collection methods for gravimetric and trace metal analysis.
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Date
1990Author
Yeats, P. A.
Brügmann, L.
Status
PublishedPages
9pp.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Filtration is the
most
commonly
used
method
for
separating
the
dissolved
and
particulate
fractions
of
seawater
samples.
A wide
variety
of
filter
types
with
different
pore
sizes
has
been
used
for
this
purpose.
Filtration
of
water
samples
for
trace
metal
analysis
has
generally
been
done
using
either
Millipore
0.45~m
cellulose
acetate/nitrate
filter
membranes,
Nuclepore
0.4~m
polycarbonate
filter
membranes,
or
similar
filter
membranes
produced
by
other
companies.
Several
studies
have
shown
that
the
concentrations
of
suspended
particulate
matter
(SPM)
measured
using
different
types
of
filters
can
vary
significantly.
For
example,
Tambiev
and
Demina
(1982)
have
shown,
using
samples
from
the
Baltic
Sea,
that
0.7~m
cellulose
nitrate
filters
can
give
a
suspended
particulate
matter
concentration
that
is
five
times
that
found
with
0.4~m
Nuclepore
polycarbonate
or
0.5~m
Dubna
.....
Resource URL
Publisher: http://ices.dk/publications/library/Publisher
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)Copenhagen, Denmark
Series;Nr
ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences; 7Document Language
enEssential Ocean Variables (EOV)
Particulate matterBest Practice Type
Standard Operating ProcedureGuide
ISSN
0903–2606Citation
Yeats, P. A. and Brügman, L. (1990) Suspended particulate matter: Collection methods for gravimetric and trace metal analysis. ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences, No. 7, 9pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-243Collections