4.5 Article

Determination of parabens in wastewater samples via robot-assisted dynamic single-drop microextraction and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry

Journal

ELECTROPHORESIS
Volume 43, Issue 15, Pages 1567-1576

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/elps.202100390

Keywords

automated sample preparation; liquid chromatography; liquid-phase microextraction; mass spectrometry; single-drop microextraction

Funding

  1. Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES-Brazil) [001]
  2. Sao Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP-Brazil) [2019/22724-7, 2017/02147-0, 2015/15462-5, 2014/07347-9]
  3. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq-Brazil) [307293/2014-9, 308843/2019-3]
  4. Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation (MINCIENCIASColombia) [679]

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Dynamic single-drop microextraction (SDME) was automated using an Arduino-based Cartesian robot and combined with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry for the determination of parabens in wastewater samples. The robot-assisted technique facilitated the control of dynamic SDME, making the process more feasible, robust, and reliable. This setup proved to be a competitive strategy for the automated extraction of organic pollutants from water samples.
Dynamic single-drop microextraction (SDME) was automatized employing an Arduino-based lab-made Cartesian robot and implemented to determine parabens in wastewater samples in combination with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. A dedicated Arduino sketch controls the auto-performance of all the stages of the SDME process, including syringe filling, drop exposition, solvent recycling, and extract collection. Univariate and multivariate experiments investigated the main variables affecting the SDME performance, including robot-dependent and additional operational parameters. Under selected conditions, limit of detections were established at 0.3 mu g/L for all the analytes, and the method provided linear responses in the range between 0.6 and 10 mu g/L, with adequate reproducibility, measured as intraday relative standard deviations (RSDs) between 5.54% and 17.94%, (n = 6), and inter-days RSDs between 8.97% and 16.49% (n = 9). The robot-assisted technique eased the control of dynamic SDME, making the process more feasible, robust, and reliable so that the developed setup demonstrated to be a competitive strategy for the automated extraction of organic pollutants from water samples.

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