RESUMO
An efficient method is presented for simultaneous enantioselective determination of three chiral triazole fungicides (namely paclobutrazol, hexaconazole, and diniconazole) in water samples by DSPE-HPLC-UV. The perfect chiral separation of the enantiomers was achieved on a Chiralpak IH column within 15 min. In order to adsorb and enrich the analytes from water matrices, a cross-linked hydroxypropyl ß-cyclodextrin polymer was synthesized. The prepared material exhibited good adsorption capacity, which was assessed by adsorption kinetic and adsorption thermodynamic experiments. One-variable-at-a-time and the response surface methodology were used to optimize the extraction parameters. Under the optimum sample preparation conditions, good linearity (2.0 ~ 800 µg L-1, R2 ≥ 0.9978), detection limits (0.6 to 1.0 µg L-1), quantitation limits (2.0 to 3.2 µg L-1), recoveries (86.7 ~ 105.8%), and the relative standard deviation (intra-day RSD ≤ 3.7%, inter-day RSD ≤ 5.1%) were obtained, satisfying the requirements of pesticides residues determination. These results demonstrated that the proposed method was applicable for routine determination of chiral triazole fungicide residues in water samples.
Assuntos
Fungicidas Industriais , beta-Ciclodextrinas , Fungicidas Industriais/análise , Água/química , Polímeros , Estereoisomerismo , Triazóis/análise , Extração em Fase Sólida/métodosRESUMO
Plastic pollution in water is threatening the environment and human health. Previous relevant studies mainly focus on macro and micro plastic pollutions and their characteristics. Little is known about the extent and characteristics of nano-scale plastics in our drinking water systems, mainly due to difficulties in their isolation and analysis. These nano-plastics may pose higher risk to human health than micro-plastics. Here we report the collection and analysis of organic nanoparticles from commercial bottled water of two brands. Novel nano-plastic particle imaging and molecular structure analysis techniques have been applied. The findings show the existence of organic nanoparticles, and a likely source has been identified to be the degradation of plastic water bottles.