4.6 Article

Carbon monolith: Preparation, characterization and application as microextraction fiber

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 1216, Issue 28, Pages 5333-5339

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2009.05.018

Keywords

Carbon monolith; Fiber; Solid-phase microextraction; Phenols

Funding

  1. National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [20625516]
  2. national 973 project of China [2007CB914200]
  3. Science Fund for Creative Research Groups [20621502]
  4. NSFC

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A carbon monolith was synthesized via a polymerization-carbonization method, styrene and divinylbenzene being adopted as precursors and dodecanol as a porogen during polymerization. The resultant monolith had bimodal porous substructure, narrowly distributed nano skeleton pores and uniform textural pores or through pores. The carbon monolith was directly used as an extracting fiber, taking place of the coated silica fibers in commercially available solid-phase microextraction device, for the extraction of phenols followed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Under the studied conditions, the calibration curves were linear from 0.5 to 50 ng mL(-1) for phenol, o-nitrophenol, 2,4-dichlorophenol and p-chlorophenol. The limits of detection were between 0.04 and 0.43 ng mL(-1). The recoveries of the phenols spiked in real water samples at 10 ng mL(-1) were between 85% and 98% with the relative standard deviations below 10%. Compared with the commercial coated ones (e.g. PDMS, CW/DVB and DVB/CAR/PDMS), the carbon monolith-based fiber had advantages of faster extraction equilibrium and higher extraction capacity due to the superior pore connectivity and pore openness resulting from its bimodal porous substructure. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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