| Literature DB >> 30086913 |
Deyber Arley Vargas Medina1, Álvaro José Santos-Neto2, Víctor Cerdà3, Fernando Maya4.
Abstract
In this work, the dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction technique based on the solidification of the organic phase (DLLME-SFO) has been automated for the first time. DLLME-SFO is automated by hyphenating a sequential injection analysis (SIA) system with a custom-made robotic phase separator. Automated in-syringe DLLME is followed by phase separation in a 3D printed device integrating a Peltier cell set, mounted on a multi-axis robotic arm. The combined action of the flow system and the robotic arm is controlled by a single software package, enabling the solidification/melting and collection of the organic phase for further analyte quantification. As proof-of-concept, automated DLLME-SFO was applied to the extraction of parabens followed by separation using liquid chromatography, obtaining LODs between 0.3 and 1.3 µg L-1 (4 mL of sample extracted in 1 mL of 1-dodecanol: MeOH, 15:85, v-v). The method showed a high reproducibility, obtaining intraday RSDs between 4.6% and 5.8% (n = 6), and interday RSDs between 5.6% and 8.6% (n = 6). The developed method was evaluated for the determination of parabens in water, urine, saliva, and personal care products.Entities:
Keywords: 3D printing; Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction; Flow analysis; In-syringe extraction; Open-source robotics; Solidification of the organic phase
Year: 2018 PMID: 30086913 DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2018.06.081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Talanta ISSN: 0039-9140 Impact factor: 6.057