| Literature DB >> 24914902 |
Małgorzata Rutkowska1, Kinga Dubalska2, Piotr Konieczka3, Jacek Namieśnik4.
Abstract
Due to human activities, the concentrations of organometallic compounds in all parts of the environment have increased in recent decades. The toxicity and some biochemical properties of mercury and tin present in the environment depend on the concentration and chemical form of these two elements. The ever-increasing demand for determining compounds at very low concentration levels in samples with complex matrices requires the elimination of interfering substances, the reduction of the final extract volume, and analyte enrichment in order to employ a detection technique, which is characterised by high sensitivity at low limits of quantification. On the other hand, in accordance with current trends, the analytical procedures should aim at the miniaturisation and simplification of the sample preparation step. In the near future, more importance will be given to the fulfilment of the requirements of Green Chemistry and Green Analytical Chemistry in order to reduce the intensity of anthropogenic activities related to analytical laboratories. In this case, one can consider the use of solvent-free/solvent-less techniques for sample preparation and microextraction techniques, because the use of the latter leads to lowering the quantity of reagents used (including solvents) due to the reduction of the scale of analysis. This paper presents an overview of microextraction techniques (SPME and LPME) used in the procedures for determining different chemical forms of mercury and tin.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24914902 PMCID: PMC6270719 DOI: 10.3390/molecules19067581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Diagram depicting the course of various procedures for determining organomercury and organotin compounds using microextraction techniques at the stage of preparing samples for analysis. Based on Oliveira, R. et al. [5].
Stages of the development and improvement of the LPME technique [6].
| Year | Methodological Solution |
|---|---|
| First single-drop-based extraction systems | |
| First drop-in-drop system | |
| Liquid stage microextraction in a dynamic system The use of microsyringe for supporting the drop | |
| Liquid-phase microextraction using fibre (LPME) | |
| Headspace Solid-Phase Microextraction (HS-SDME) | |
| Using ionic liquids as the extracting agent | |
| Using water as a solvent in liquid-phase microextraction | |
| Liquid-phase microextraction using ultrasound as a factor supporting the extraction process | |
| Liquid-phase microextraction using microwave radiation as a factor supporting the extraction process Automation of the single-drop microextraction process | |
| Combining microextraction to the liquid phase with flame atomic absorption spectroscopy | |
| Liquid-phase microextraction using an ionic liquid combined with dispensing a sample to the column using a thermal desorption device |
Figure 2Classification of various approaches in liquid-phase microextraction.
Figure 3Diagram of a set for direct immersion single-drop microextraction (DI-SDME) and headspace single-drop microextraction (HSSDME).Based on Pena-Pereira, F. et al. [14].
Figure 4A diagram of the set for liquid–liquid–liquid microextraction. Based on Pena-Pereira, F. et al. [14].
Figure 5A diagram of a set for continuous flow microextraction [23].
Figure 6A diagram presenting consecutive stages of dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction.Based on Pena-Pereira, F. et al. [6].
Figure 7A diagram of the structure of a set for hollow-fibre liquid phase microextraction (HF-LPME).Based on Pena-Pereira, F. et al. [6].
Examples of application of selected microextraction techniques for analyte sampling before the determination of various forms of tin and mercury.
| Sample Type | Species | Method | Derivatization | Fiber/Extraction Time/Extraction Mode Or Extractant Phase/Drop Volume (µL)/Sample Volume (mL)/Extraction Time (min)/Stirring Rate (Flow Rate) | Detection Technique | E.F. | Precision (RSD %) | Detection Limit | Reference | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gas condensate | Met2-Hg | SPME | None (direct sampling) | 100 µm PDMS/30 s/HS | MIP-AES | - | - | 20 µg/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water, fish tissue | MetHg | SPME | NaBEt4/acetate buffer pH 4.5 | 100 µm PDMS/5 min/HS | AFS | - | - | 3.0 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water, seawater | TeMT TMT DMT MMT | SPME | NaBEt4/acetic acid buffer pH 4 | 100 µm PDMS/20 min/HS | FPD | - | - | 41 ng/L 15 ng/L 8.4 ng/L 8.6 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Surface water, sediment | Alkylmercury Alkyltin | SPME | NaBEt4/acetate buffer pH 5.0 | 100 µm PDMS/10 min/HS | ICP-MS | - | - | 3.7 ng/L 0.38–1.2 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sediment | MBT DBT TBT MetHg | SPME | NaBEt4/acetate buffer pH 5.3 | 100 µm PDMS/10 min/HS | ICP-MS | - | - | 0.34 ng/L 2.1 ng/L 1.1 ng/L 4.3 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sediment, sewage sludge | MBT DBT TBT MPhT DPhT TPhT | SPME | NaBEt4/ethanoic acid buffer pH 4.8 | 100 µm PDMS/60 min/LPh | FPD | - | - | 0.031 ng/L 0.007 ng/L 0.006 ng/L 0.114 ng/L 0.167 ng/L 0.583 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Slurry of sediment | MBT DBT TBT TeBT | SPME | NaBEt4/acidified with HCl | 100 µm PDMS/45 min/LPh | MIP-AES | - | - | µg/L range | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Soil | MetHg EtHg PhenHg | SPME | Hydride generation (KBH4)/acetate buffer pH 4 | Fused-silica fiber (pretreated with conc. HF acid for 3.5–4 h)/1.5–2 h/HS | AAS (quartz tube) | - | - | Not reported | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Soil | Et2-Hg Met2-Hg | SPME | None (direct sampling) | 100 µm PDMS/20 min/HS | MIP-AES | - | - | 3.5 µg/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Environmental, sediment | MBT DBT TBT | SPME | NaBEt4/acetate buffer pH 4 | 100 µm PDMS/60 min/HS | FID | - | - | 10 µg/L 1.2 µg/L 0.9 µg/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Body fluids | MBT DBT TBT MetHg Hg2+ | SPME | NaBEt4/acetate buffer pH 5.3 | 100 µm PDMS/10 min/HS | EI-MS-MS | - | - | 9 ng/L 13 ng/L 9 ng/L 22 ng/L 18 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Urine | MetHg Hg2+ | SPME | NaBEt4/buffer pH 4 | 100 µm PDMS/15 min/HS | EI-MS | - | - | 303 ng/L 93 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Biological samples, sediments | MetHg | SPME | Hydride generation (KBH4)/acetate buffer pH 3 | Fused-silica fiber (pretreated with conc. HF acid for 3.5–4 h)/1.5–2 h/HS | AAS (quartz tube) | - | - | Not reported | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Seawater samples, Sediment sample, Biological samples (fish, crab, prawn) | MeHg | SPME | Na[B(C6H5)4]/acetate buffer pH = 4.5 | 100 µm PDMS/15 min | GC-MS | - | - | 0.02 | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Aqueous samples | Organotin | HS-SPME | NaBEt4 (
| 100 mm PDMS | GC-AED | - | - | pg/L ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Organomercury | NaBEt4 (
| CW/PDMS | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Natural water | MBT, TBT, MetHg Hg2+ | HS-SPME | 2% NaBEt4/0.2 M acetic acid and 0.2 M sodium acetate/pH 5.5 | PDMS/30 min | GC-EI-MS | - | - | below ng/L or sub ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Marine sediments | MBT, DBT, TBT | HS-SPME | NaBEt4 (
| PDMS | GC-MS | - | - | 730–969 pg/g | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Estuarine superficial sediment | MBT, DBT, TBT | HS-SPME | NaBEt4/1.5 M sodium acetate Buffer/pH 4.3 | 100 mm PDMS/15 min | GC-FID | - | - | - | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Biological materials and road dust | TMT, DMT, MMT, MBT, DBT, TBT | HS-SPME | - | PDMS/DVB | MC-GC-ICP-TOFMS | - | - | below pg/g | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| MetHg | CAR/PDMS | 2 pg/g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Hg2+ | CAR/PDMS | 1.3 pg/g | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Natural water | TMT, DMT, MMT, MetHg Hg2+ | HS-SPME | NaBEt4/buffer pH 5.3 | PDMS µm | GC-MS | - | 5 3 20 14 20 | level ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| DVB/CAR/PDMS 50 µm/30 µm/30 min/5 mL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water samples | MeHg DBT TBT | HS-SPME | NaBEt4 | 100 µm PDMS/or 50 µm/30 µm DVB/CAR/PDMS 30 min for MeHg/60 min for DBT and TBT | GC-MS | - | 5 14 20 | 3 ng/L 7 ng/L 16.8 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Aqueous samples | MetHg Hg2+ | DI-SPME | - | PDMS | GC-MS | - | - | - | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | MMT DMT TMT MBT DBT TBT TPT Dioctyltin MetHg EtHg PhenHg Met2-Hg Et2-Hg | SDME | - | [C4MIM][PF6]/[C8MIM][PF6]/5/10/15 (30)/- | ETAAS | 28/18 28/20 90/161 12/14 10/11 15/23 32/24 35/28 5/4 15/13 40/27 15/7 32/14 | - | - | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| CV-AFS | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water | Hg Sn | SDME | NaBH4 in the sample; Pd(II) in the drop | Pd(II)/3/5/3.5/1000 rpm | 72 37 | 8.7 8.2 | 800 90 | [ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water | Hg | SDME | H2Dz in the drop | m-Xylene containing H2Dz/10/ 15/20/300 rpm | ETAAS | 970 | 6.1 | 10 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Tuna fish and dogfish muscle | MetHg | SDME | NaBH4 in the sample; Pd(II) in the drop | Pd(II)/3/5/3/300 rpm | ETAAS | 40 | 7 | 5000 | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | Organotin | HS-SDME | - | Decane/11 min | GC-MS | - | 3.6 | TBT: 3 (Sn) ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Sediment CRM | MBT DBT TBT | HS-SDME | - | Decane/11 min | GC-MS | - | 3.6 | 3 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Biological, environmental samples | MBT DBT TBT | HS-SDME | - | Decane/5 min | GC-ICP-MS | - | 4.4–10.1 | 0.8–1.8 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | Organomercury | D-SDME | - | [C4MIM][PF6]/15 min | CVAAS | 5–40 | - | - | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | Organotin | D-SDME | - | [C4MIM][PF6]/15 min | ETAAS | 10–90 | - | - | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | TBT TPT | D-SDME | - | α,α,α,-Trifluorotoluene/60 min | GC-MS-MS | 140 2.9 | 11 10 | 0.36 ng/l 2.9 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| River water | Hg | D-SDME | - | Xylene/20 min | ETAAS | 970 | 6.1 | 10 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water samples | MetHg EtHg PhenHg Hg+ | D-SDME | - | [C4MIM][PF6]/20 min | HPLC | 107 31 11 3 | 5.3 3.7 9.4 11.6 | 11.0 ng/L 1.6 ng/L 7.1 ng/L 22.8 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | Organotin | DLLME | - | Tetrachloromethane, ethanol/<3 min | GC-FPD | 825–1036 | 2.3–5.9 | 0.2–1 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water samples | MBT DBT TBT | DLLME | butyltin compounds aqueous solution pH = 4.5/NaBEt4 | Tetrachloromethane, methanol/20 min | GC-MS | - | 17 15 9 | 1.7 ng/L 2.5 ng/L 5.9 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| - | Organomercury | LLLME | - | Toluene, L–cysteine/40 min | CE-UV | 210–324 | 6.1–7.2 | 430–940 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Water samples | MetHg EtHg PhenHg | HF-LPME | - | Toluene, Na2S2O3/5 min | HPLC-UV | 120 215 350 | 8.9 6.4 6.6 | 3800 ng/L 700 ng/L 300 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Human hair, sludge | MetHg | HF-LPME | - | Toluene/0 min | ETAAS | 55 | 11 | 400 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Human hair, fish sample, dogfish muscle CRM | MetHg EtHg PhenHg | HF-LPME | - | Bromobennzene, L–Cysteine/50 min | LVSS-CE/UV | 3610 3160 4580 | 3.3 3.6 7.5 | 140 ng/L 70 ng/L 30 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fish CRM | MetHg | HF-LPME | - | Toluene/10 min | ETAAS | 55 | 11 | 400 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Human hair, sludge and dogfish muscle | MetHg | HF-LPME | -/ | Toluene/4/3/10 min/1300 | ETAAS | 55 | 11 | 400 ng/L | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| thiourea in the lumen of the fibre | Toluene/thiourea 4% (m/v) in 1 mol L−1 HCl | 204 | 13 | 100 ng/L | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fish CRM | MetHg | HF-LLLME | Toluene, thiourea/10 min | ETAAS | 204 | 13 | 100 ng/L | [ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fish CRM, water | MetHg EtHg PhenHg | HF-LLLME | - | Polypropylene /toluene (octanol, CCl4)/Na2S2O3/6/3.8/25 min | HPLC-UV | 120–350 | 6.4–8.9 | 3–3.8 ng/mL | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Dogfish muscle | MeHg EtHg PhHg | HF-LLLME | - | - | On-line FIDS-HPLC | 120 215 350 | 8.9 6.4 6.6 | 10–25 ng/g | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Seawater sample | MeHg EtHg | HF-LLLME | - | - | LC-ICP-MS | 120 215 | 8.9 6.4 | 0.03 ng/mL 0.04 ng/mL | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fish sample | MeHg | HF-LLLME | - | - | GC-AFS | 120 | 8.9 | 1.2 pg | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Fish tissues | MeHg | HF-LLLME | - | - | GC-ICP-MS | 120 | 8.9 | 2.1 ng/g | [ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Figure 8The structure of a stationary phase microextraction device (SPME). 1—piston; 2—cylinder; 3—needle; 4—extraction fibre.
Characteristics of extraction fibres for commercially available SPME set [27,29,52,57].
| Fibre Cover | Acronym | Thickness of the Film (µm) | Final Determination | Application |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| of Fibre with Non-polar Cover | ||||
| Polydimethylsiloxane | PDMS | 100 30 7 | GC, HPLC | Non-polar organic compounds (Hg0, MetHg, MBT, DBT, TBT, MPhT, DPhT, TPhT), VOCs, PAHs, BTEX |
| Fibre with Polar Cover | ||||
| Polyacrylate | PA | 85 | GC, HPLC | Polar organic compounds, triazine, phosphorganic, pesticides and phenols |
| Fibres with Mixed-Properties Cover | ||||
| Polydimethylsiloxane‒Polydivinylbenzene | PDMS-DVB | 65 60 GC | HPLC | Aromatic hydrocarbons aromatic amines, VOCs, TMT, DMT, MMT, MBT, DBT, TBT |
| Polydimethylsiloxane‒Carboxen | PDMS-CAR | 75 | GC | Gaseous/volatile analytes (Hg0, MeHg), VOCs, hydrocarbons |
| Carbowax‒Polydivinylbenzene | CW-DVB | 65 | GC | Polar organic compounds, alcohols, ketones, nitroaromatic compounds |
| Carbowax-resin with molecular print | CW-TPR | 50 | HPLC | Anion surfactants, aromatic amines |
| Polydimethylsiloxane‒Polydivinylbenzene/Carboxen | PDMS/DVB/CAR | 50/30 | GC | Hg0, MeHg, DBT, TBT |
Parameters affecting the efficiency of the microextraction processes.
| Technique | Parameters | References |
|---|---|---|
| LPME |
type of extraction solvent type of dispersing solvent volume of the extracting agent volume of the dispersing agent volume of the sample mixing intensity extraction time salting out pH of the sample | [ |
| SPME |
extraction conditions (temperature, extraction time, mixing method) ionic strength of solutions stationary phase volume headspace phase volume volume of the sample pH of the sample using additions (salt or solvent) type of material from which the fibre is made | [ |
Advantages and disadvantages of selected microextraction techniques.
| Advantages | Disadvantages | Technique | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Cheap Easy to use little use of the solvent |
Impermanence of drops Low sensitivity and precision | SDME | [ | |
|
Cheap Easy to use Quick High flexibility in the selection of operating parameters (e.g., amount of the solvent, mixing speed) |
Impermanence of drops Low sensitivity and precision Limited solvent choice | DI-SDME | [ | |
|
Possibility of using various solvents Excellent cleaning of samples with a complex matrix composition Possibility of extracting volatile and water-soluble analytes Easy to use Quick Cheap |
Low sensitivity and precision | HS-SDME | [ | |
|
High repeatability Good clean-up ability High numerical value of the enrichment coefficient Cheap Easy to automate and miniaturise |
Relatively long extraction time Possibility of fibre pores getting blocked | HF-LPME | [ | |
|
Cheap Quick Requires the use of a small amount of sample Requires the use of a small amount of organic solvents High numerical value of the enrichment coefficient The extraction efficiency does not depend on the time The balance time is established over a very short period of time High recovery |
Low selectivity Requires the use of three solvents Limited solvent choice Requires centrifugation Not appropriate for samples with a complex matrix composition | DLLME | [ | |
|
Requires the use of a small amount of organic solvents Easy to use High numerical value of the enrichment coefficient | - | LLLME | [ | |
|
Quick Cheap Low analyte losses Easy to use Possibility of implementing an analytical procedure on-line Possibility of using liquid, gaseous and solid samples, High sensitivity, Easy to automate and miniaturize |
Relatively expensive (fibre cost) Limited time of fibre use Matrix effects Fibre damage | SPME | [ | |
|
Continuous contact between the solvent drop and a fresh sample solution Possibility of accurate control of the solvent drop size (combined with HPLC) High numerical value of the enrichment coefficient Requires the use of a small amount of sample | - | CFME | [ | |