4.6 Article

Evaluation of solid-phase microextraction as an alternative to the official method for the analysis of organic micro-pollutants in drinking water

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHROMATOGRAPHY A
Volume 1101, Issue 1-2, Pages 46-52

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chroma.2005.10.005

Keywords

SPME; drinking water; micro-pollutants; water-packaging material interactions

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The objective this study was to compare the official EU liquid-liquid extraction (LLE) method with solid-phase microextraction (SPME) for the analysis of compounds migrating from cross-linked polyethylene into water. A medium polarity polydimethylsiloxane/divinylbenzene (PDMS/DVB) 65 mu m fibre proved most efficient for the SPME extraction of nine test compounds and the optimum extraction conditions were an immersion time of 30 min with heating to 60 degrees C. The repeatability of the SPME method was variable: RSD values ranged from approximately 4-18% depending on the individual compound, though correlation coefficients were greater than 0.999 in the concentration range 0.5-1000 VgA. It would also seem that there is some competition amongst different compounds for sites on the fibre and this is a potential drawback of SPME when applied to unknown samples. However, when applied to water samples in contact with polyethylene, SPME proved to be immensely more sensitive and to have a greater extraction range than LLE. These factors coupled with the rapidity and ease of use of SPME mean that it could be developed for use as an alternative to the existing official method or as an alert system in the routine analysis of materials used to transport domestic water. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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