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1.
Anal Chem ; 72(21): 5280-4, 2000 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11080876

ABSTRACT

To obtain a high degree of selectivity in sample preparation, supported liquid membrane (SLM) extraction was combined with immunologic recognition. The SLM employs a hydrophobic polymer for supporting the immobilization of an organic solvent, thus forming a nonporous membrane. Said membrane separates the aqueous sample on one side (donor) from a receiving aqueous phase on the other (acceptor). The extraction involves the partitioning of neutral compounds between the sample solution, continuously pumped alongside the membrane, and the membrane. From the membrane, reextraction takes place into a second aqueous phase containing antibodies specific for the target compound(s). Hence, there is a formation of an antibody-antigen complex at the heart of the sample preparation (ImmunoSLM). When the immunocomplex forms, the antigen can no longer redissolve in the organic membrane, thus being trapped in the acceptor. Consequently, the concentration gradient of free antigen over the membrane is ideally unaffected, this being the driving force for the process. With a surplus of antibody, the concentration of analyte in the receiving phase will easily exceed the initial sample concentration. In this work, the so formed immunocomplex was quantified on-line, using a fluorescein flow immunoassay in a sequential injection analysis (SIA) setup. The outlined ImmunoSLM-SIA scheme was successfully applied for the extraction of 4-nitrophenol from spiked water solutions as well as from a spiked wastewater sample, indicating that the immunoextraction can be suitable when dealing with difficult matrixes.

2.
J Chromatogr A ; 870(1-2): 151-7, 2000 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10722072

ABSTRACT

An automatic method for the determination of metabolites of Ropivacaine in urine was set up. It utilizes supported liquid membrane extraction for sample clean-up and enrichment, followed by ion-pair chromatography determination using UV detection. The extraction was very selective with no observed interfering compounds from the urine matrix, permitting simple isocratic chromatographic analysis. The detection limits for spiked urine samples were 2-18 nM for the different compounds. The repeatability was 1-3% (RSD) with an internal standard that was also extracted, and about twice without this standard. A throughput of 3.3 samples per hour was achieved and the liquid membrane was stable for more than a week.


Subject(s)
Amides/urine , Anesthetics, Local/urine , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Automation , Membranes, Artificial , Reproducibility of Results , Ropivacaine , Sensitivity and Specificity , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
3.
J Chromatogr A ; 869(1-2): 523-9, 2000 Feb 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10720266

ABSTRACT

Membrane-based continuous liquid-liquid extraction combined on-line with normal-phase liquid chromatography is proposed for the determination of cationic surfactants in complex aqueous samples. The technique has the potential for complete automation. Selective enrichment of cationic surfactants from spiked river water and waste-water samples with simultaneous removal of matrix constituents, followed by a quantitative transfer of the extract onto a liquid chromatographic column and separation of the surfactant homologues yielding low detection limits, has been realised. The homologues of alkyldimethylbenzylammonium chloride (Dodigen 226) were chosen as model compounds in the method development. Dodigen homologues were ion-paired with heptanoic acid and extracted into chlorobutane by means of microporous membrane liquid-liquid extraction. It was thereby possible to attain an enrichment of over 250 times for one of the homologues, viz. the concentration in the organic liquid is 250 times higher than in the original sample. Detection limits for the three best-detected homologues of the mixture were in the range 0.7-5 microg/l in spiked river water samples. Ion-pair normal-phase liquid chromatography, again with heptanoic acid as counter-ion, gave the necessary separation of the surfactant homologues.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Surface-Active Agents/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Cations , Industrial Waste , Sensitivity and Specificity , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet
4.
Anal Chem ; 69(9): 1732-7, 1997 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9145027

ABSTRACT

A hollow fiber miniaturized supported liquid membrane (SLM) device for sample preparation is connected on-line with capillary electrophoresis and used for determination of a basic drug, bambuterol, in human plasma. The analyte is extracted from the outside of the hollow fiber (donor) through the liquid membrane (pores of the fiber impregnated with organic solvent) into the acceptor solution in the fiber lumen. The process is driven by differences in pH between the donor and acceptor solution. The whole volume of the acceptor solution can then be injected into the CZE capillary by using the double-stacking procedure for large volume-injection. Very clean extracts of low ionic strength are obtained from the SLM treatment, making this sample pretreatment method compatible with the CZE double-stacking procedure, which in turn makes it possible to inject large volumes of sample onto the separation capillary. Good performance of the whole procedure is demonstrated, and detection limits in the low nanomolar range were obtained in spite of the relatively weak UV absorbance of bambuterol. Extractions through the miniaturized SLM unit can be performed for 5-6 h without regenerating the fiber. The regeneration procedure was tested, and no relevant changes in the performance of the extraction could be found after seven regenerations, allowing the same fiber to be used for a week.


Subject(s)
Electrophoresis, Capillary/instrumentation , Terbutaline/analogs & derivatives , Electrophoresis, Capillary/methods , Humans , Membranes, Artificial , Miniaturization , Terbutaline/blood
5.
Anal Chem ; 68(15): 2559-63, 1996 Aug 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21619202

ABSTRACT

A miniaturized supported liquid membrane device has been developed for sample preparation and connected on-line to a packed capillary liquid chromatograph. The device consists of hydrophobic polypropylene hollow fiber, inserted and fastened in a cylindrical channel in a Kel-F piece. The pores of the fiber are filled with an organic solvent, in this study 6-undecanone, thus forming a liquid membrane. The sample is pumped on the outside of the hollow fiber (donor), and the analytes are selectively enriched and trapped in the fiber lumen (acceptor). With this approach, the volume of the acceptor solution can be kept as low as 1-2 µL. This stagnant acceptor solution is then transferred through capillaries attached to the fiber ends to the LC system. The system was tested with a secondary amine (bambuterol), as a model substance in aqueous standard solutions as well as in plasma. The best extraction efficiency in aqueous solution, with an acceptor volume of 1.9 µL, was 32.5% at a donor flow rate of 2.5 µL/min. At flow rates above 20 µL/min, the concentration enrichment per time unit was approximately constant, at 0.9 times/min, i.e., 9 times enrichment in about 10 min. The overall repeatability (RSD) for spiked plasma samples was ∼4% (n = 12). Linear calibration curves of peak area versus bambuterol concentration were obtained for both aqueous standard solutions and spiked plasma samples. The detection limit for bambuterol in plasma, after 10 min of extraction at a flow rate of 24 µL/min, was 80 nM.

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