Evaluation of the digestion capability of ammonium bifluoride for the determination of major and trace elements in Ti-rich minerals by ICP-MS†
Abstract
Complete sample digestion is a prerequisite to achieve accurate and precise results of elemental concentrations and isotopic compositions in Ti-rich minerals of interest, such as refractory rutile. In this study, a rapid digestion protocol using ammonium bifluoride (NH4HF2) was developed to completely digest large amounts of rutile, ilmenite, titanite and perovskite. These Ti-rich samples (50 mg) can be completely digested in 4 hours with the use of 300 mg of NH4HF2 at 230 °C, and each 200 mg of rutile and ilmenite ore can be completely dissolved with NH4HF2 digestion and without insoluble residues present. Furthermore, NH4HF2 digestion was found to be effective in dissolving the different sizes (31–150 μm) of Ti-rich minerals. Compared to common HNO3–HF closed-vessel acid digestion, the proposed NH4HF2 digestion provides consistent results for major Ti and thirty-six other trace elements in a series of ilmenite ore reference materials and in-house Ti-rich minerals. It was found that elemental concentrations (Ti, Sc, V, Cr, Nb, Ta, Hf and U) in rutile measured by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) using NH4HF2 digestion were consistent with the values measured in the pressed powder pellet of rutile by laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS). However, lower recoveries of Ti, V, Nb and Ta in rutile were obtained from closed-vessel acid digestion, possibly due to the formation of white precipitates during the evaporation/redissolution process. The proposed NH4HF2 digestion is safe and more effective in quickly dissolving Ti-rich materials and suitable for the determination of quantities of major and trace elements.