Single‐drop microextraction technique for the determination of antibiotics in environmental water

Author(s):  
Guizhen Li ◽  
Kyung Ho Row
2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 517-525 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaoyi Li ◽  
Quanle Li ◽  
Aifang Xue ◽  
Hao Chen ◽  
Shengqing Li

A simple coupling of low-density solvent-based solvent-demulsification dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (2-min pre-extraction) and single-drop microextraction (15-min back-extraction).


2013 ◽  
Vol 838-841 ◽  
pp. 2566-2569
Author(s):  
Jian Qi Sun ◽  
Bo Qiao ◽  
Jun Dai

This study describes an analytical method employing capillary gas chromatography (GC) using flame ionization detection (FID) that has been developed for the simultaneous determination of chlorobenzenes (m-dichlorobenzene (m-DCB),p-dichlorobenzene (p-DCB),o-dichlorobenzene (o-DCB) and 1,2,4-trichlorobenzene (1,2,4-TCB)) in wastewater. For this purpose, single-drop microextraction (SDME) was applied as a sample preparation technique. The SDME parameters such as types of extractants, volume of the microdroplet size, extraction time, stir rate and immersion depth of needle point were studyed and optimized. The method was linear in the ranges from 4.0×10-3to 40.0 μg·mL-1form-DCB,p-DCB ando-DCB, and 4.0×10-3to 30.0 μg·mL-1for 1,2,4-TCB withR2≥0.9955. The SDME procedure allowed efficient recovery of the investigated chlorobenzenes ranging between 80 % and 105 % with a relative standard deviation (RSD) ≤6.5 for actual wastewater sampes spiked with 2, 5 and 10 μg·mL-1of chlorobenzes, respectively. These results showed the potential of this technique for chlorobenzenes monitoring in wastewater samples. Furthermore, the investigated methods are simple, reliable, reproducible, and not expensive.


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