4.6 Article

Magnetic Torus Microreactor as a Novel Device for Sample Treatment via Solid-Phase Microextraction Coupled to Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: A Route for Arsenic Pre-Concentration

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27196198

Keywords

torus microreactor; magnetic solid microextraction; arsenic preconcentration; graphite furnace detection

Funding

  1. Support Funding for Assistant Professors (FAPA) grant [PR.3.2017.4047]

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This study explored the feasibility of using a novel microreactor with a torus geometry for sample pretreatment. The torus microreactor design improved the efficiency of analyte adsorption and achieved a high preconcentration factor.
This work studied the feasibility of using a novel microreactor based on torus geometry to carry out a sample pretreatment before its analysis by graphite furnace atomic absorption. The miniaturized retention of total arsenic was performed on the surface of a magnetic sorbent material consisting of 6 mg of magnetite (Fe3O4) confined in a very small space inside (20.1 mu L) a polyacrylate device filling an internal lumen (inside space). Using this geometric design, a simulation theoretical study demonstrated a notable improvement in the analyte adsorption process on the solid extractant surface. Compared to single-layer geometries, the torus microreactor geometry brought on flow turbulence within the liquid along the curvatures inside the device channels, improving the efficiency of analyte-extractant contact and therefore leading to a high preconcentration factor. According to this design, the magnetic solid phase was held internally as a surface bed with the use of an 8 mm-diameter cylindric neodymium magnet, allowing the pass of a fixed volume of an arsenic aqueous standard solution. A preconcentration factor of up to 60 was found to reduce the typical characteristic mass (as sensitivity parameter) determined by direct measurement from 53.66 pg to 0.88 pg, showing an essential improvement in the arsenic signal sensitivity by absorption atomic spectrometry. This methodology emulates a miniaturized micro-solid-phase extraction system for flow-through water pretreatment samples in chemical analysis before coupling to techniques that employ reduced sample volumes, such as graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy.

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