| Literature DB >> 26354941 |
Liliana Correa1, Jhon Alex Fiscal1, Sandra Ceballos2, Alberto de la Ossa2, Gonzalo Taborda1, Cristina Nerin3, Milton Rosero-Moreano1.
Abstract
A liquid-phase microextraction method that uses a hollow-fiber solvent bar microextraction technique was developed by combining gas chromatography with electron capture detection for the analysis of four trihalomethanes (chloroform, dichlorobromomethane, chlorodibromomethane, and bromoform) in drinking water. In the microextraction process, 1-octanol was used as the solvent. The technique operates in a two-phase mode with a 5 min extraction time, a 700 rpm stirring speed, a 30°C extraction temperature, and NaCl concentration of 20%. After microextraction, one edge of the membrane was cut, and 1 μL of solvent was collected from the membrane using a 10 μL syringe. The solvent sample was directly injected into the gas chromatograph. The analytical characteristics of the developed method were as follows: detection limits, 0.017-0.037 ng mL-1 ; linear working range, 10-900 ng mL-1 ; recovery, 74 ± 9-91 ± 2; relative standard deviation, 5.7-10.3; and enrichment factor, 330-455. A simple, fast, economic, selective, and efficient method with big possibilities for automation was developed with a potential use to apply with other matrices and analytes.Entities:
Keywords: Drinking water; Emerging contaminants; Hollow-fiber solvent bar microextraction; Liquid-phase microextraction; Trihalomethanes
Year: 2015 PMID: 26354941 DOI: 10.1002/jssc.201500324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sep Sci ISSN: 1615-9306 Impact factor: 3.645