JoVE Science Education
Analytical Chemistry
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JoVE Science Education Analytical Chemistry
Internal Standards
  • 00:00Visão Geral
  • 01:14Principles of Internal Standards
  • 03:38Preparation of an Internal Standard Calibration Curve
  • 05:13Preparation of a Real Sample with an Internal Standard
  • 07:05Applications
  • 08:54Summary

内部标准

English

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Visão Geral

资料来源: 实验室的博士 B.吉尔 Venton-弗吉尼亚大学

许多化学分析的目标是物质的定量分析,样品中的量物质的确定在哪里。为了准确地计算未知样品的浓度,小心样品制备是关键。每次处理或转移样品时,样品的一些可能会丢失。将样品损失降至最低,为战略。也有应对样品损失和仍然进行准确的测量浓度的战略。

为了尽量减少样品损失,理想是尽量的样品处理和转移步骤数。例如,直接进入解决方案将在烧瓶集结固体样品降低了转移步骤。如果有必要从一瓶转移到另一个,并被稀释,然后三清洗玻璃器皿有助于确保所有的样品转移。其他战略是更具体的样品。例如,一次性的聚丙烯管亦可能更好地处理样品吸附到玻璃,比如蛋白质。管不是样本的亲水,所以如果可以吸取水中极少量,它是样本的最好已经掺过水的管,所以可以直接进入溶剂吸取样品。它可能是更好地集中注意力,而不是完全干燥样品,从 insolubilities 再水化后的损失。

样品损失的另一个来源是通过不完整示例操作。例如,如果使用衍生过程和衍生化不完整,样品的全部数额是没有观察到。像这样的错误是系统误差,并通过纠正的问题,例如更改衍生过程就可以迎刃而解。在测量系统误差的另一个原因是基体效应。这些示例可以减少这种影响可以干涉测量的某些物质和表演校准在相同的矩阵。

定量分析通常进行使用外部或内部的标准。为外部标准,校准曲线是通过测量不同已知的浓度的感兴趣。然后,从标准分别运行示例。内部标准,该标准已经作为被测物的兴趣,使测量同时采取相同的样本。通常情况下,一个不同的物种添加内部标准和比例的响应呼吁,内部的标准和计算分析物。这个想法是反应,称为响应因子,比他们的浓度成正比。方法必须能够区分的利益被分析物和内部标准,任何样品损失发生后添加的内部标准应该是类似的两种物质,而因此响应的比率保持不变。使用内部标准的一个特殊情况是标准的附加,哪里添加到解决方案中越来越多的被分析物和原始的分析物量反算的方法。内部标准可用于色谱法、 电化学和光谱。

Princípios

Procedimento

1.适当的样品处理: 制作解决方案 带上干净的烧杯和大众正确的样品量到它。记录实际的大规模使用。在此示例中,腺嘌呤的解决方案是在容量瓶作为一种内部的标准用于下一个分析。腺嘌呤的质量是 100 毫克。做不直接大规模到容量瓶,因为它有一个长脖子和腺嘌呤不能轻松地添加或删除。 添加约 25 毫升的溶剂 (在这种情况下二甲基亚砜 (DMSO)) 的烧杯和让它搅拌溶解。在此示?…

Applications and Summary

Internal standards are used in many fields, including spectroscopy and chromatography. In spectroscopy, internal standards can help correct for random errors due to changes in light source intensity. If a lamp or other light source has variable power, it will affect the absorption and consequently, emission of a sample. However, the ratio of an internal standard to analyte will stay constant, even if the light source does not. One example of this is using lithium (Li) as an internal standard for the analysis of sodium in a blood sample by flame spectroscopy. Li is chemically similar to sodium but is not natively found in blood.

For chromatography, internal standards are often used in both gas chromatography and liquid chromatography. For applications with mass spectrometry as the detector, the internal standard can be an isotopically-labeled analyte, so that the molecular weight (MW) will be different than the analyte of interest. Internal standards are commonly used in pharmaceutical or environmental analyses.

Transcrição

Sample loss can occur every time a sample is handled or transferred, thereby making accurate calculations of concentration difficult.

To ensure accuracy, the effects of sample loss must be minimized using careful sample preparation and by limiting the number of sample handling and transfer steps. However, sample loss can also occur due to systematic errors, such as incomplete sample manipulation, matrix effects, and variations in analytic procedure.

These sources of loss can be accounted for by adding a known concentration of a species similar, but not identical, to the compound of interest. This is called an internal standard. Any sample losses that occur to the internal standard should be similar for the analyte, allowing for the concentration to be accurately calculated.

This video will illustrate the use of an internal standard and proper lab technique to account for sample loss when determining the concentration of an unknown.

An internal standard is a substance added in a known amount to standards, samples, and blanks during an analysis.

In chromatography and spectroscopy, the ratio of the signal for the internal standard and the analyte is calculated. This ratio, called the response factor, is proportional to the ratio of the analyte and standard concentrations.

Response factor, R, can be expressed by the following equation, where A represents the analytical signals of the sample and internal standard and C represents the concentrations of the sample and internal standard.

An internal standard can compensate for both systematic and random errors. For example, random errors—such as inconsistencies when measuring a sample—will be the same for both the internal standard and the analyte. Therefore, the ratio of their signals will not change.

For systematic errors, such as matrix effects in solution, the ratio will be unaffected as long as the matrix effect is equal for both the standard and the analyte.

While internal standards provide great benefit, it can be difficult to choose one that is suitable. An internal standard must have a signal that is similar, but not identical, to the analyte. It also cannot affect the measurement of the analyte in any way.

Finally, the concentration must be well known. This is achieved by ensuring that the internal standard is not natively present in the sample; thus, the only source of it in solution is the known concentration added.

In the following experiment, the concentration of caffeine in an unknown sample will be determined by gas chromatography.

This is achieved by creating a calibration curve using known caffeine solutions, with adenine as the internal standard. The slope of the calibration curve is equal to the response factor.

Once the response factor is known, the concentration of the unknown can be calculated from its measured chromatogram area ratio.

Now that you understand the basics of internal standards, let’s take a look at the procedure.

To begin the procedure, accurately weigh 100 mg of the internal standard, adenine, into a clean beaker.

Next, dissolve it in roughly 20 mL of dimethyl sulfoxide, and mix the solution.

Once the adenine has dissolved, pour the solution into a 50-mL volumetric flask.

Rinse the beaker and stir bar with 10 mL of DMSO, and pour the rinse into the flask. Repeat this rinse twice, to ensure proper solution transfer. Fill to the calibration mark, resulting in an internal standard with a concentration of 2 mg/mL.

Next, weigh 100 mg of caffeine into a beaker to prepare a stock solution. Dissolve the caffeine with a small amount of methanol. Then, use 3 rinses to transfer this solution to a fresh 25 mL volumetric flask. This is the 4 mg/mL stock solution. Use it to create 3 caffeine standards.

Next, add 0.2 mL of the internal standard, adenine, to each flask. Fill each to the final volume with methanol. Transfer each solution to a sample vial.

Run each caffeine standard through a gas chromatograph. Calculate the ratio of peak areas for the caffeine versus the adenine standard.

First, weigh 2 g of coffee into a 100-mL beaker, and record the weight.

Next, add 20 mL of methanol to extract the caffeine from the coffee. Allow the solution to stir for 20 min.

Using a Büchner funnel, filter out the coffee grounds. Rinse the beaker with a small amount of methanol, and pour this rinse into the funnel. Repeat the rinse twice.

Measure the final volume of the filtrate; it should be approximately 35 mL.

To prepare the sample for analysis, add 1 mL of the coffee extract to a sample vial. Then, add 0.2 mL of the adenine internal standard, and place the vial into the instrument’s auto-sampler rack.

Run a gas chromatography analysis of the sample, ensuring that the conditions are such that the caffeine and adenine are separate.

After completing the analysis, compute the peak area for both the internal standard and the analyte.

Once all the samples have been analyzed, the standard calibration curve can be determined for the caffeine/adenine solutions by plotting the ratios of the peak areas versus the ratios of the concentrations. The slope of this line, which represents the response factor, was 1.8.

Next, the GC data from the extracted coffee sample is analyzed. The ratio of the peak areas was calculated to be 1.78. Using the response factor and the known concentration of the internal standard, adenine, the concentration of caffeine in the unknown sample was calculated to be 0.33 mg/mL.

Many different types of reactions, across various scientific disciples, utilize internal standards to minimize the effects of errors and sample loss.

The effects of sample loss encountered during sample preparation can be minimized using internal standards, keeping their concentration ratio nearly constant.

In this example, bioactive lipids were extracted from lysed cells using a liquid-liquid extraction process. Stable isotope internal standards were added at the beginning of extraction to account for errors during sample preparation.

Internal standards were not only critical for the preparation of the bioactive lipids, but also for the analysis. The lipids were separated using high-performance liquid chromatography, and analyzed via mass spectrometry.

In spectroscopy, internal standards can help correct for random errors due to changes in light source intensity. If a lamp or other light source has variable power, it will affect the absorption and consequently, emission of a sample. However, the ratio of an internal standard to analyte will stay constant, even if the light source does not.

In chromatography, one of the largest sources of error is the injection. Auto-samplers help minimize this, but error can still be 1–2% relative standard deviation.

In this example, vapor standards containing an internal standard were analyzed using gas chromatography to establish a calibration curve. Once this was complete, the unknown sample could then be measured and the losses due to volatility of the sample accounted for.

You’ve just watched JoVE’s introduction to internal standards. You should now understand best practices for minimizing sample loss, internal standards, and response factors.

Thanks for watching!

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JoVE Science Education Database. JoVE Science Education. Internal Standards. JoVE, Cambridge, MA, (2023).