How often have you struggled with the challenges of dissolving tungsten carbide? Prolonged dissolution times, inconsistent experimental results, and the use of highly corrosive reagents may have hindered your analytical work. Today, we present a groundbreaking solution that marks a new era in tungsten carbide dissolution.
In the analysis of hard metal powders, dissolution represents a critical step. Conventional methods employing strong acids like nitric, hydrofluoric, and phosphoric acids present numerous drawbacks. Hydrofluoric and phosphoric acids pose significant safety hazards and tend to form precipitates that compromise analytical accuracy. Moreover, these methods are time-consuming and inefficient for modern analytical demands.
Tungsten carbide, a composite material primarily composed of tungsten monocarbide, exhibits remarkable resistance to acid attack due to its complex structure. While hydrofluoric and nitric acids can achieve complete dissolution, hydrofluoric acid's corrosive nature and tendency to form tungstic acid and tungsten fluoroborate precipitates create substantial analytical challenges. Some researchers have attempted using phosphoric acid for solution stabilization, but these "heavy" acids often cause nebulization interference in ICP analysis unless rigorous matrix matching techniques are employed.
To address these limitations, we have developed and optimized a hydrogen peroxide-based dissolution method. Initial research referenced an internal manual suggesting tungsten carbide could dissolve in a solution containing 5% aqua regia and 95% hydrogen peroxide at 85°C, though detailed protocols were lacking.
Our studies demonstrate hydrogen peroxide's crucial role in the dissolution process. Research by Andersson and Bergstrom revealed that tungsten carbide continuously oxidizes to tungsten trioxide at pH levels above 3, with the overall dissolution reaction being oxidative in non-buffered solutions. They also observed that cobalt presence reduces tungsten solubility, suggesting cobalt passivates oxidized tungsten surfaces. Tungsten solubility similarly decreases when pH falls below 3.
We conducted extensive experimentation to validate the hydrogen peroxide method's efficacy. Using 0.5000 g of fine tungsten carbide-cobalt powder treated with 30 mL of 5% (v/v) aqua regia in 30% hydrogen peroxide, we achieved complete dissolution within 10 minutes at 80°C. Tartaric acid (0.6 g) was added to complex tungsten and prevent precipitation. For samples showing precipitation tendencies, additional hydrogen peroxide droplets were introduced.
Quality control measures included analysis of NIST Standard Reference Material 889 (containing 9.50% Co, 4.60% Ta, and 4.03% Ti) with each sample batch. While certified reference materials for vanadium and chromium were unavailable, secondary standards and spike recovery tests ensured method reliability.
| Element | Certified Concentration (g/100g) | Measured Concentration (g/100g) |
|---|---|---|
| Cobalt | 9.50 ± 0.15 | 9.56 ± 0.19 |
| Tantalum | 4.60 ± 0.15 | 4.48 ± 0.28 |
| Titanium | 4.03 ± 0.10 | 3.96 ± 0.16 |
| Vanadium | 0.63 | 0.59 ± 0.06 |
The aqua regia/hydrogen peroxide method demonstrates several significant improvements:
While hydrogen peroxide causes minor bubble formation during ICP-OES measurement (resulting in precision %RSD typically below 7% at 0.5 ppm), accuracy remains acceptable. The method requires no matrix matching for calibration standards, unlike phosphoric acid-based approaches.
This research establishes the aqua regia/hydrogen peroxide method as a reliable, efficient, and economical solution for tungsten carbide dissolution. The technique's safety advantages, combined with its analytical performance, represent a significant advancement in hard metal analysis. Future developments may further optimize hydrogen peroxide concentrations and explore alternative complexing agents to enhance method performance.