1. Nature of Samples Flashcards

1. List of the main environmental components and their inter-dependency 2. Physical & chemical composition of matrices 3. Types of interference presented in samples 4.Relate the concept of a representative sample to sample matrices 5. measure physical and chemical properties of soil and water samples

1
Q

what are three cycles come together to form a sample matrix

A

Air cycle
Water cycle
Soil cycles

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2
Q

the general interaction of gasses and living being in the Air cycles

A

CO2 - Plants - O2 - Human - CO2 - Plants - etc

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3
Q

how the water cycles work?

A

as a purifier, sun heats and vaporizes surface water. water vapor condenses to form clouds and precipitate to earth

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4
Q

soil formations depends on which factors

A

parent materials
climate
topography
organisms present

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5
Q

What are five soil horizons?

A
  1. Litter box
  2. A - Highly weather, abundance of mineral, OM, Decaying vegetation
  3. B - Partially weather material from A, clays, OM, Fe, Al
  4. C - Partially weather bedrock
  5. D - unmodified bedrock
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6
Q

Factors that affect water sample

A
  • Depth, flow
  • proximity to source
  • recharge rate
  • soil composition
  • topography
  • Natural of contaminant
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7
Q

Factors that affect soil sample

A

Depth, proximity to source topography, nature of contaminant

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8
Q

3 categories that Air samples can be divided into

A
  • Volatiles -> 0.1 kpa
  • Semi-volatiles 0.1 - 10^-8 kpa
  • Nonvolatiles <10^-8 kpa
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9
Q

What is an interference

A

a chemical or physical property of a sample that causes errors in the measurement process

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10
Q

Sources of interferences

A
  1. sample collection
  2. sample transport and storage
  3. sample preservation
  4. sample analysis - equipment errors
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11
Q

Types of interferences

A
  1. Addictive interference
  2. Subtractive interference
  3. Multiplicative interference
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12
Q
  1. Additive interference
A

caused by sample constituents that generate a signal that add to the analyte signal, change the intercept not slope.

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13
Q
  1. Subtractive interference
A

an interference reacts with chemical reagents to prevent them from reacting with the analyte -> lower test results

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14
Q
  1. Multiplicative interference
A

caused by sample constituents that either increase or decrease the analyte signal without generating a signal of their own –> change the slope not intercept

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15
Q

the differences btw False positive and False negative

A

False positive: shows A high/higher [ ] of analyte than actually present in the sample is reported
False negative: shows a lower [ ] of analyte

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16
Q

sample homogenous

A

welmixed and uniform

17
Q

sample matrix heterogeneous

A

not uniform, layers of individual phases, discrete samples