“…Multielemental speciation studies, a successor of well-studied single element speciation, is recently gaining more attention despite difficulties resulting from chromatographic separation [5]. The following papers on the multielemental speciation in different matrices have been reported, for: As, Se [4,6,7]; As, Cr [5,[8][9][10]; As, Sb [11,12]; Cr, Se [13]; As, Se, Cr [14][15][16]; As, Sb, Se [17][18][19]; As, Se, Sb, Te [4]; As, Se, Cr, Mo [20]. The key issue in multielemental speciation analysis is the selection of such separation and determination conditions, which, for individual species of several elements, simultaneously ensure: (i) retention of each of the analytes on a chromatographic column and its elution in a reasonable analysis time; (ii) complete separation of analytical signals; (iii) symmetrical analytical signals; (iv) stability of the different species throughout the whole analytical procedure; (v) elimination of potential interferences; (vi) sufficiently low detection limits.…”