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1.
Anal Chim Acta ; 805: 60-9, 2013 Dec 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24296144

ABSTRACT

Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction with solidification of floating organic drop (DLLME-SFO) is one of the most interesting sample preparation techniques developed in recent years. Although several applications have been reported, the potentiality and limitations of this simple and rapid extraction technique have not been made sufficiently explicit. In this work, the extraction efficiency of DLLME-SFO for pollutants from different chemical families was determined. Studied compounds include: 10 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, 5 pesticides (chlorophenoxy herbicides and DDT), 8 phenols and 6 sulfonamides, thus, covering a large range of polarity and hydrophobicity (LogKow 0-7, overall). After optimization of extraction conditions using 1-dodecanol as extractant, the procedure was applied for extraction of each family from 10-mL spiked water samples, only adjusting sample pH as required. Absolute recoveries for pollutants with LogKow 3-7 were >70% and recovery values within this group (18 compounds) were independent of structure or hydrophobicity; the precision of recovery was very acceptable (RSD<12%) and linear behavior was observed in the studied concentration range (r(2)>0.995). Extraction recoveries for pollutants with LogKow 1.46-2.8 were in the range 13-62%, directly depending on individual LogKow values; however, good linearity (r(2)>0.993) and precision (RSD<6.5%) were also demonstrated for these polar solutes, despite recovery level. DLLME-SFO with 1-dodecanol completely failed for extraction of compounds with LogKow≤1 (sulfa drugs), other more polar extraction solvents (ionic liquids) should be explored for highly hydrophilic pollutants.

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20563915

ABSTRACT

Trace organic precursors remaining in water after primary treatment can originate a variety of toxic disinfection by-products during chlorination. Therefore, knowledge of conditions leading to their persistence or transformation in chlorinated media is crucial for human health protection. Using phenol as model compound at trace level (50 ppb), the short term formation and degradation of chlorophenols (CPs) in plain water and buffered water (pH 4.8, 7 and 9) treated with typical chlorine doses (1-5 ppm) was investigated. Total phenol consumption and quantitative degradation of formed CPs occurred in < or =5h with 5 ppm chlorine in plain water and alkaline buffer, and with 1 ppm chlorine in phosphate buffer of pH 7. The enhanced reactivity in this buffer was attributed to high ionic strength (0.18 M). On the contrary, phenol was only slowly transformed to monochlorophenols (MCPs) in acidic media. Analysis of phenol and CPs concentration profiles indicated the coexistence of two competing reaction pathways in neutral and alkaline conditions: 1) successive ortho-para chlorination of aromatic ring up to 2,4,6-trichlorophenol followed by ring cleavage, 2) direct oxidation of MCPs to rapidly degradable oxygenated aromatics (dihydroxybenzenes, benzoquinones). Ionic strength and pH had some influence on preferred pathway but chlorine dose was determinant.


Subject(s)
Chlorophenols/chemistry , Phenols/chemistry , Halogenation , Water Pollutants, Chemical/chemistry
3.
J Chromatogr Sci ; 41(9): 480-8, 2003 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14596785

ABSTRACT

The behavior and main characteristics of a commercial immunosorbent (IS) cartridge for the solid-phase extraction of phenylureas are determined in this work. The measured capacity for the analyte-antigen (isoproturon) in a new cartridge is 215 ng and, after more than 100 adsorption-desorption cycles, the remaining capacity still is approximately 70 ng, demonstrating the good stability of the bonded antibody and the interesting possibility of extensive cartridge reuse. Only isoproturon and diuron are specifically retained in this sorbent. The weak nonspecific retention of other pesticides, including other phenylureas, can be avoided by increasing the sample volume during the loading step. Thus, a very selective and sensitive method for the determination of isoproturon and diuron in natural and potable waters is developed by loading a 50-mL sample adjusted to pH 7.4 in the IS cartridge, eluting with methanol-water (60:40, v/v), and analyzing the eluate by high-performance liquid chromatography with UV detection. The clean chromatograms, low detection limits (approximately 0.1 micro g/L), and good precision (< 5%) obtained with this rapid and simple method demonstrate that immunoaffinity extraction can be an excellent alternative for sample preparation in the environmental monitoring of particular pesticides in water matrices.

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