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1.
Talanta ; 269: 125410, 2024 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38035454

ABSTRACT

Concepts of air Segmented Flow Analysis (SFA) and Flow Injection Analysis (FIA) are discussed and compared with the performance of a new method based on comprehensive flow programming. The programmable Flow Injection (pFI), miniaturized on the lab-on-valve platform, can perform tasks that can not be done in any other way, such as Auto calibration by a single standard solution or analysis in a flow-batch mode that exactly simulates the traditional manual batch technique. Performance of pFI is documented by examples of nutrient determinations in sea water.

2.
J Sep Sci ; 46(18): e2300448, 2023 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37582639

ABSTRACT

At the turn of the millennium, the monolithic columns invoked new chances in HPLC. Even more than their organic polymer-based siblings, the inorganic silica-based monoliths targeted the territory of classical fully porous particle-packed columns, promising many benefits. Based on the number of published articles, the monoliths attracted academics just in the first few years after their introduction to the market. Lately, as superficially porous particles and sub-2-micron fully porous particles dominated the market, they stayed in the focus of routine laboratories and those who really appreciated the high porosity of the monolithic bed. The monoliths' practical benefits cannot be easily traced in the literature when they gradually lose academics' interest. Nevertheless, after more than 20 years of our experience, we still favor silica monoliths for their low back pressure and longevity when analyzing samples of clinical, pharmaceutical, and environmental origin. At the same time, the high permeability of monoliths enabled the birth of sequential injection chromatography, the medium-pressure separation technique based on the flexible flow manifold. This minireview aims to check, discuss, and summarize the practical aspects of monolithic silica columns in HPLC and medium-pressure sequential injection chromatography (SIC) that may not be visible at first sight but are evident retrospectively.

3.
Talanta ; 263: 124688, 2023 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37247455

ABSTRACT

A novel method for the extraction of river water contaminants as model analytes of ranging polarities, including bisphenols A, C, S, Z, fenoxycarb, kadethrin, and deltamethrin, using small compact fibrous disks has been developed and validated. Polymer nanofibers and microfibers prepared from poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), polypropylene, polyurethane, polyacrylonitrile, poly(lactic acid), and polycaprolactone doped with graphene were evaluated in terms of extraction efficiency, selectivity, and stability in organic solutions. Our novel extraction procedure comprised preconcentration of analytes from 150 mL river water to 1 mL of eluent using a compact nanofibrous disk freely vortexed in the sample. Small nanofibrous disks with a diameter of 10 mm were cut from a compact and mechanically stable 1-2 mm thick micro/nanofibrous sheet. After 60 min extraction in a magnetically stirred sample located in a beaker, the disk was removed from the liquid and washed with water. Then, the disk was inserted into a 1.5 mL HPLC vial and extracted with 1.0 ml methanol upon short intensive shaking. Our approach avoided the undesired problems related to the manual handling typical of "classical" SPE procedure since the extraction was carried out directly in the HPLC vial. No sample evaporation, reconstitution, or pipetting was required. The nanofibrous disk is affordable, needs no support or holder, and its use avoids creation of plastic waste originating from disposable materials. Recovery of compounds from the disks was 47.2-141.4% depending on the type of polymer used and the relative standard deviations calculated from 5 extractions ranged from 6.1 to 11.8% for poly(3-hydroxybutyrate), 6.3-14.8% for polyurethane, and 1.7-16.2% for polycaprolactone doped with graphene. A small enrichment factor was obtained for polar bisphenol S using all sorbents. A higher preconcentration reaching up to 40-fold was achieved for lipophilic compounds such as deltamethrin when using poly(3-hydroxybutyrate) and graphene-doped polycaprolactone.

4.
Talanta ; 258: 124420, 2023 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36907165

ABSTRACT

Reaction-based assays are commonly automated and miniaturized via flow analysis. However, aggressive reagents can affect or destroy even the chemically resistant manifold during long-term use. Using on-line solid-phase extraction (SPE) can eliminate this drawback and allow for high reproducibility and further advanced automation, as presented in this work. Determination of creatinine in human urine, an important clinical marker, by sequential injection analysis was achieved using bead injection on-line SPE with specific UV spectrophotometric detection, providing the necessary sensitivity and selectivity of the method for bioanalysis. The automated SPE column packing and disposal, calibration, and fast measurement highlighted the improvements in our approach. Variable sample volumes and a single working standard solution eliminated matrix effects, broadened the calibration range, and accelerated the quantification. Our method comprised an injection of 20 µL of 100 × times diluted urine with aqueous acetic acid solution pH 2.4, sorption of creatinine in a strong cation exchanger SPE column, washing out urine matrix with 50% aqueous acetonitrile, and elution of creatinine with 1% ammonium hydroxide. The SPE step was accelerated by a single flush of the column when the eluent/matrix wash/sample/standard zones sequence was created in the pump holding coil, and then the sequence of the zones was flushed into the column at once. The whole process was continually spectrophotometrically detected at 235 nm, subtracted from the signal at 270 nm. A single run duration was less than 3.5 min. Method relative standard deviation was <5.0% (n = 6). A calibration range was linear within the range of 0.02-0.30 µg creatinine (R > 0.999), covering 1.0-15.0 mmol/L creatinine in urine. The standard addition method used two different volumes of a single working standard solution for quantification. Results proved the effectiveness of our improvements in the flow manifold, bead injection, and automated quantification. The accuracy of our method was comparable to the routine enzymatic assay of real urine samples in a clinical laboratory.


Subject(s)
Solid Phase Extraction , Humans , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Creatinine , Reproducibility of Results , Automation , Solid Phase Extraction/methods
5.
J Proteome Res ; 21(12): 2846-2892, 2022 12 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36355445

ABSTRACT

The performance of the current bottom-up liquid chromatography hyphenated with mass spectrometry (LC-MS) analyses has undoubtedly been fueled by spectacular progress in mass spectrometry. It is thus not surprising that the MS instrument attracts the most attention during LC-MS method development, whereas optimizing conditions for peptide separation using reversed-phase liquid chromatography (RPLC) remains somewhat in its shadow. Consequently, the wisdom of the fundaments of chromatography is slowly vanishing from some laboratories. However, the full potential of advanced MS instruments cannot be achieved without highly efficient RPLC. This is impossible to attain without understanding fundamental processes in the chromatographic system and the properties of peptides important for their chromatographic behavior. We wrote this tutorial intending to give practitioners an overview of critical aspects of peptide separation using RPLC to facilitate setting the LC parameters so that they can leverage the full capabilities of their MS instruments. After briefly introducing the gradient separation of peptides, we discuss their properties that affect the quality of LC-MS chromatograms the most. Next, we address the in-column and extra-column broadening. The last section is devoted to key parameters of LC-MS methods. We also extracted trends in practice from recent bottom-up proteomics studies and correlated them with the current knowledge on peptide RPLC separation.


Subject(s)
Chromatography, Reverse-Phase , Proteomics , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Chromatography, Reverse-Phase/methods , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Peptides/analysis , Proteomics/methods
6.
J Food Sci Technol ; 59(7): 2764-2775, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35734112

ABSTRACT

Para Red (PR) and Sudan dyes have been illegally used as colorants to adulterate certain foods by enhancing their red/orange colour. In addition, they are toxic and carcinogenic. This work presents the development of a simple flow injection chromatographic method combined with chemometric tools to perform the determination of PR, Sudan I (SI) and Sudan II (SII) in food samples. The flow chromatographic system consisted of a low-pressure manifold coupled to a reverse phase monolithic column. A Partial Least Square (PLS) model was applied to resolve overlapped absorption spectra registered for each dye at the corresponding retention time. The relative errors of calibration (RMSECV, %) were 0.49, 0.85 and 0.23, and the relative errors of prediction (RMSEP, %) were 1.12, 0.75 and 0.33 for PR, SI and SII, respectively. The residual predictive deviation (RPD) values obtained were higher than 3.00 for all analytes. The method was successfully applied to quantify the dyes in six different commercial spices samples. The results were compared with the HPLC reference method concluding that there were no significant differences at the studied confidence level (α = 0.05). The proposed method can be used to rapidly determine the analytes in a simple, reliable, low-cost and environmentally-friendly manner. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s13197-021-05299-8.

7.
Talanta ; 219: 121189, 2020 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32887106

ABSTRACT

Effective process, including a cartridge packing polypropylene fiber sorbent modified by following on-line polydopamine coating, for on-line solid phase extraction in 2D UHPLC system has been developed. Hydrophobic surface of mechanically stable polypropylene fibers was hydrophilized using an automated and reproducible in situ coating process to enable good wettability and effective extraction of polar compounds. Polymerization mixture consisting dopamine and TRIS buffer was circulated through the cartridge containing polypropylene fibers using a peristaltic pump to achieve polymerization. This process was optimized in terms of dopamine amount in the polymerization mixture, its flow rate, and polymerization time. Best results were obtained with 25 mL polymerization mixture containing 20 mg dopamine circulated through the cartridge at a flow rate of 2.07 mL min-1 for 60 min. Prepared cartridges were evaluated via measurement of the recovery and reproducibility using chlorogenic acid as a model compound. Overall reproducibility of our multistep process including eight cartridges in 2D UHPLC system, each measured in triplicate, was 3.61% (n = 24).

8.
Talanta ; 204: 272-277, 2019 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31357293

ABSTRACT

Since its inception, sequential injection chromatography (SIC) has evolved through several stages. Key moments including introduction of the novel technique combining sequential injection analysis and monolithic column, the first generation of commercial SIC system employing robust pump, the utilization of columns packed with fused-core particles, the on-line hyphenation of extraction and separation steps in SIC, are now followed by the second generation of commercial SIC system employing stainless steel syringe pump and parts optimized for chromatographic separation. The key developments always mean acceleration of the evolution by opening new avenues and reduction of compromises in automated analytical methods based on the flow analysis. The updates, new features, and prospects of the novel instrument are described and discussed on perspective of the method developed for extraction and separation of selected phenolic acids (gallic, protocatechuic, caffeic, p-coumaric and ferulic). The method hyphenates miniaturized on-line solid phase extraction using strong anion exchange sorbent in commercial cartridge for HPLC (20 × 1 mm) and liquid chromatography using chromatographic column (C18 50 × 4.6 mm, 5 µm particles) packed with fused-core particles in the SIC manifold. The separation in gradient mode used acetonitrile: aqueous formic acid pH 2.0 mobile phase and spectrophotometric detection at 270, 300, and 320 nm. Injected sample volumes were 200 and 500 µL. The performance of the extraction step was characterized by the recovery 94.0-107.8%, enrichment factors about 20 or 50, and the separation by peak capacities 13-34, peak symmetries 1.17-1.64, and resolutions 0.82-3.75). While using a sample volume of 200 µL, our method was characterized by the following validation parameters: LODs of 0.0075-0.03 mg L-1, LOQs of 0.025-0.10 mg L-1, calibration ranges 0.025-2.50 mg L-1 (r > 0.999), repeatability of signal at 0.50 mg L-1of RSD ≤ 1.46% (n = 6), and overall time of analysis 7.1 min. The results including pilot analysis of white and red wines demonstrated the capability of novel SIC instrument to enable fast, selective, and sensitive analysis.

9.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 411(6): 1219-1228, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30617392

ABSTRACT

A fully automated method for the determination of lovastatin in dietary supplements containing red yeast rice has been developed. It uses a sequential injection analysis system combined with solid-phase extraction applying highly selective molecularly imprinted polymer sorbent. A miniaturized column for on-line extraction was prepared by packing 4.5 mg of the sorbent in a 5.0 × 2.5-mm-i.d. cartridge, which was used in the flow manifold. Sequential injection analysis manifold enabled all steps of lovastatin extraction and continuous spectrophotometric detection at 240 nm. A limit of detection of 60 µg g-1, a limit of quantitation of 200 µg g-1, and a linear calibration range of 200-2000 µg g-1 were achieved. Intra-day and inter-day precision values (RSD) were ≤ 6.7% and ≤ 4.9%, respectively, and method recovery values of spiked red yeast rice extracts at 200, 1000, and 2000 µg g-1 concentration levels were 82.9, 95.2, and 87.7%. Our method was used for determination of lovastatin lactone in four dietary supplements containing red yeast rice as a natural source of lovastatin, also known as monacolin K. The extracted samples were subsequently analyzed by the reference UHPLC-MS/MS method. Statistical comparison of results (F test, t test, α = 0.05) obtained by both methods did not reveal significant difference. A substantial advantage of the new automated approach is high sample throughput thanks to the analysis time of 7.5 min, miniaturization via down-scaling the extraction column, and smaller sample and solvent consumption, as well as reduced generation of waste. Graphical abstract ᅟ.


Subject(s)
Anticholesteremic Agents/analysis , Biological Products/analysis , Dietary Supplements/analysis , Lovastatin/analysis , Molecular Imprinting/methods , Solid Phase Extraction/methods , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/instrumentation , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/methods , Equipment Design , Flow Injection Analysis/instrumentation , Flow Injection Analysis/methods , Limit of Detection , Molecular Imprinting/instrumentation , Polymers/chemistry , Solid Phase Extraction/instrumentation , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet/instrumentation , Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet/methods , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/instrumentation , Tandem Mass Spectrometry/methods
10.
J Sep Sci ; 41(15): 3042-3050, 2018 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29878559

ABSTRACT

The separation of seven phenolic compounds including gallic acid, chlorogenic acid, epicatechin, quercitrin, rutin, phloridzin, and phloretin present in apple peel and pulp and differing in elution properties has been optimized using high-performance liquid chromatography with diode array detection. Several stationary phases were tested to achieve the efficient separation of phenolic compounds in fruit extracts and C18 was found to be the most efficient. Core-shell and fully porous C18 packings were assessed with respect to the complex composition of the fruit extracts. The developed high-performance liquid chromatography method comprised gradient elution in which mobile phase A was water at pH 2.8 adjusted with acetic acid and B was acetonitrile. The gradient shape was the following: 0 min 95% A/5% B, 2.5 min 85% A/15% B, 12 min 50% A/50% B, 15 min 95% A/5% B. The flow rate was 1 mL/min, injection volume 10 µL, and UV detection at 255, 280, 320, and 365 nm was applied. Our method was validated for both C18 core-shell and fully porous packings. The resolution 6.2-14.8, symmetry 0.99-1.34, peak capacity 18-60, peak area repeatability 0.45-1.00% relative standard deviation, calibration range 0.125-5 mg/mL (0.25-10 mg/mL for chlorogenic acid and rutin), correlation coefficients of calibration curve 0.9976-0.9997, and accuracy evaluated as recovery 95.56-107.54% were determined for the core-shell column.


Subject(s)
Malus/chemistry , Phenols/analysis , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
11.
Talanta ; 181: 326-332, 2018 May 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29426520

ABSTRACT

Nylon 6 nanofibers were tested for their ability to serve as a sorbent for solid phase extraction (SPE). The regular nanostructure providing a great sorption area and amidic functionality should lead to the assumption that nylon 6 nanofibers could be used as a novel sorbent with great potential for sample pre-treatment. However, due to the substantial differences between classical particle sorbents used for solid phase extraction and nanofibers, it is necessary to evaluate this novel approach. This article describes three types of laboratory fabricated nylon 6 nanofibers with different surface density (5.04gm-2, 3.90gm-2 and 0.75gm-2) and corresponding surface areas for solid phase extraction of several groups of compounds with different structural and physicochemical properties (parabens, steroids, flavonoids and pesticides). The nanofibers were created by needleless electrospinning. Extraction columns were manually packed in classic 1- or 3-mL plastic syringe cartridges with 26-30mg of nanofibers and the column bed was sealed with polypropylene frits. The SPE procedure followed a typical five-step protocol and the collected eluates were analyzed by HPLC with UV detection. Extraction recovery was used as a parameter to evaluate the behavior of the analytes within the SPE process. Under this set condition, the recovery of the SPE process ranged from 23.1% to 125.8%. SPE showed good repeatability (0.58-11.87% RSD) and inter-day reproducibility (3.86-9.79% RSD). The achieved results were compared with SPE using a classic particle sorbent column. Good mechanical and chemical stability of nanofibers was proved. Scanning electron microscope was used for the evaluation of morphological changes in nanostructure. Nylon 6 nanofibers proved being a cost-effective sorbent for repeated use in SPE. Nylon 6 nanofibers have great potential in miniaturized SPE enabling users to overcome troubles with high back-pressure.

12.
J Pharm Biomed Anal ; 143: 123-129, 2017 Sep 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28586724

ABSTRACT

Sequential Injection Chromatography (SIC) evolved from fast and automated non-separation Sequential Injection Analysis (SIA) into chromatographic separation method for multi-element analysis. However, the speed of the measurement (sample throughput) is due to chromatography significantly reduced. In this paper, a sub-1min separation using medium polar cyano monolithic column (5mm×4.6mm) resulted in fast and green separation with sample throughput comparable with non-separation flow methods The separation of three synthetic water-soluble dyes (sunset yellow FCF, carmoisine and green S) was in a gradient elution mode (0.02% ammonium acetate, pH 6.7 - water) with flow rate of 3.0mLmin-1 corresponding with sample throughput of 30h-1. Spectrophotometric detection wavelengths were set to 480, 516 and 630nm and 10Hz data collection rate. The performance of the separation was described and discussed (peak capacities 3.48-7.67, peak symmetries 1.72-1.84 and resolutions 1.42-1.88). The method was represented by validation parameters: LODs of 0.15-0.35mgL-1, LOQs of 0.50-1.25mgL-1, calibration ranges 0.50-150.00mgL-1 (r>0.998) and repeatability at 10.0mgL-1 of RSD≤0.98% (n=6). The method was used for determination of the dyes in "forest berries" colored pharmaceutical cough-cold formulation. The sample matrix - pharmaceuticals and excipients were not interfering with vis determination because of no retention in the separation column and colorless nature. The results proved the concept of fast and green chromatography approach using very short medium polar monolithic column in SIC.


Subject(s)
Chemistry, Pharmaceutical/methods , Chromatography , Coloring Agents , Drug Compounding , Water
13.
J Sep Sci ; 40(6): 1225-1233, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28106329

ABSTRACT

A recently presented new type of "multilayered" organic-inorganic hybrid silica particle packed column YMC-Triart C18 (50 mm × 4.6 mm, 5 µm) was used for the development of a sequential injection chromatography method for determination of five azo dyes (Sudan I, Sudan II, Sudan III, Sudan orange G, and para red) in selected food seasonings. The use of a novel sorbent brings attractive features, reduced backpressure, and broader chemical stability together with high separation performance, which are discussed and compared with that of three types of columns typically used in medium-pressure flow chromatography techniques (classic monolithic, narrow monolithic, and core-shell particle columns). The separation was performed in gradient elution mode created by the zone mixing of two mobile phases (acetonitrile/water 90:10, 1.5 mL + acetonitrile/water 100:0, 2.3 mL) at a flow rate of 0.60 mL/min and time of analysis <9.5 min. The spectrophotometric detection wavelengths were set to 400, 480, and 500 nm. The high performance of the developed method with multilayered particle column was well documented and the results indicate a broad capability of sequential injection chromatography.

14.
Anal Chim Acta ; 923: 45-54, 2016 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27155301

ABSTRACT

By virtue of their compactness, long-term stability, minimal reagent consumption and robustness, miniaturized sequential injection instruments are well suited for automation of assays onboard research ships. However, in order to reach the sensitivity and limit of detection required for open-ocean determinations of trace elements, it is necessary to preconcentrate the analyte prior its derivatization and subsequent detection by fluorescence. In this work, a novel method for the determination of dissolved zinc (Zn) at subnanomolar levels in seawater is described. The proposed method combines, for the first time, automated matrix removal, extraction of the target element, and fluorescence detection within a miniaturized flow manifold, based on the Lab-On-Valve (LOV) concept. The key feature of the microfluidic manipulation of the sample is flow programming, designed to pass sample through a mini-column where the target analyte and other complexable cations are retained, while the seawater matrix is washed out. Next, zinc is eluted and merged with a Zn selective fluorescent probe (FluoZin-3) at the confluence point of the LOV central channel using two high-precision stepper motor driven pumps that are operated in concert. Finally, the thus formed Zn complex is transported to the LOV flow cell for selective fluorescence measurement. This work describes the characterization and optimization of the method including Solid Phase Extraction using the Toyopearl AF-Chelate-650M resin, and detailed assay protocol controlled by a commercially available software and instrument. The proposed method features a LOD of 0.02 nM, high precision (<3% at 0.1 and 2 nM Zn levels), an assay cycle of 13 min and a reagent consumption of 150 µL FluoZin-3 per sample, which makes the method highly suitable for oceanographic shipboard analysis. The accuracy of the method has been validated through the analysis of seawater reference standards and comparison with ICP-MS determinations on seawater samples collected in the upper 1300 m of the subtropical south Indian Ocean. This work confirms that integration of sample pretreatment with optical detection in the LOV format offers a widely applicable approach to trace analysis of seawater.


Subject(s)
Seawater/chemistry , Solid Phase Extraction/methods , Spectrometry, Fluorescence/methods , Trace Elements/analysis , Zinc/analysis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Limit of Detection , Miniaturization , Polycyclic Compounds/chemistry , Reference Standards
15.
Talanta ; 150: 213-23, 2016 Apr 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26838402

ABSTRACT

We report on a Lab-On-Valve (LOV) configuration for analyte preconcentration from milliliter sample volumes using confluent mixing in the holding coil for in-line addition of loading buffer. The system was applied to the spectrophotometric determination of iron(II) in acidified seawater using 1,10-phenanthroline as color reagent. A cellulose-based chelating sorbent containing 8-hydroxyquinoline was used for the first time in LOV and excellent retention behavior and loading capacity were found. The flow system employs a syringe pump for handling all solutions (sorbent suspension, loading buffer, water, eluent, and color reagent) and a peristaltic pump for sample propulsion and includes a fit-for-purpose 14 cm long detection glass flow cell and a bubble trap for in-line carrier degasification. Advantage was taken of the LOV flow-through port to keep the eluted analytes for re-aspiration for subsequent chromogenic reaction. In effect, a universal analyzer configuration and preconcentration procedure was developed, which is combinable with other analytes, sorbents, and reagents. Among the studied parameters were the compositions, pH, volumes, and flow rates of loading buffer, eluent, and color reagent, as well as the microcolumn size, repeatability, and system stability. Reproducibility of 4.1% RSD over the entire working range, a LOD of down to 5 nmol L(-1), sampling frequency of 12h(-1), and linearity up to 1 µmol L(-1) for 3.3 mL of sample were obtained and applicability to real samples was demonstrated. It was proven that both Fe(III) and Fe(II) were retained and yielded similar recovery and sensitivity values. The method was applied to coastal seawater samples and spiking experiments yielded recovery values close to 100%.


Subject(s)
Analytic Sample Preparation Methods/methods , Cellulose/chemistry , Iron/analysis , Iron/chemistry , Limit of Detection , Oxyquinoline/chemistry , Seawater/chemistry , Analytic Sample Preparation Methods/instrumentation , Buffers , Chelating Agents/chemistry , Color , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Iron/isolation & purification , Phenanthrolines/chemistry , Reproducibility of Results , Solid Phase Extraction
16.
Talanta ; 143: 132-137, 2015 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26078140

ABSTRACT

A novel approach for automation of Micro-Extraction by Packed Sorbent (MEPS), a solid phase extraction technique, is presented, enabling precise and repeatable liquid handling due to the employment of sequential injection technique. The developed system was used for human urine sample clean-up and pre-concentration of betaxolol before its separation and determination. A commercial MEPS C-18 cartridge was integrated into an SIChrom™ system. The chromatographic separation was performed on a monolithic High Resolution C18 (50×4.6 mm) column which was coupled on-line in the system with Micro-Extraction using an additional selection valve. A mixture of acetonitrile and aqueous solution of 0.5% triethylamine with acetic acid, pH adjusted to 4.5 in ratio 30:70 was used as a mobile phase for elution of betaxolol from MEPS directly onto the monolithic column where the separation took place. Betaxolol was quantified by a fluorescence detector at wavelengths λ(ex)=220 nm and λ(em)=305 nm. The linear calibration range of 5-400 ng mL(-1), with limit of detection 1.5 ng mL(-1) and limit of quantification 5 ng mL(-1) and correlation r=0.9998 for both the standard and urine matrix calibration were achieved. The system recovery was 105±5%; 100±4%; 108±1% for three concentration levels of betaxolol in 10 times diluted urine - 5, 20 and 200 ng mL(-1), respectively.


Subject(s)
Betaxolol/isolation & purification , Betaxolol/urine , Chromatography/methods , Injections , Solid Phase Microextraction/methods , Urinalysis/methods , Equipment Design , Humans , Male , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Urinalysis/instrumentation
17.
Talanta ; 136: 75-83, 2015 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25702988

ABSTRACT

In this work, the applicability of Sequential Injection Chromatography for the determination of transition metals in water is evaluated for the separation of copper(II), zinc(II), and iron(II) cations. Separations were performed using a Dionex IonPAC™ guard column (50mm×2mm i.d., 9 µm). Mobile phase composition and post-column reaction were optimized by modified SIMPLEX method with subsequent study of the concentration of each component. The mobile phase consisted of 2,6-pyridinedicarboxylic acid as analyte-selective compound, sodium sulfate, and formic acid/sodium formate buffer. Post-column addition of 4-(2-pyridylazo)resorcinol was carried out for spectrophotometric detection of the analytes׳ complexes at 530nm. Approaches to achieve higher robustness, baseline stability, and detection sensitivity by on-column stacking of the analytes and initial gradient implementation as well as air-cushion pressure damping for post-column reagent addition were studied. The method allowed the rapid separation of copper(II), zinc(II), and iron(II) within 6.5min including pump refilling and aspiration of sample and 1mmol HNO3 for analyte stacking on the separation column. High sensitivity was achieved applying an injection volume of up to 90µL. A signal repeatability of<2% RSD of peak height was found. Analyte recovery evaluated by spiking of different natural water samples was well suited for routine analysis with sub-micromolar limits of detection.


Subject(s)
Chromatography/methods , Copper/analysis , Iron/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis , Zinc/analysis , Drinking Water/analysis , Formates/chemistry , Fresh Water/analysis , Mineral Waters/analysis , Picolinic Acids , Pyridines/chemistry , Resorcinols/chemistry , Sulfates/chemistry
18.
Talanta ; 133: 142-9, 2015 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25435240

ABSTRACT

On-line sample pretreatment (clean-up and analyte preconcentration) is for the first time coupled to sequential injection chromatography. The approach combines anion-exchange solid-phase extraction and the highly effective pentafluorophenylpropyl (F5) fused-core particle column for separation of eight sulfonamide antibiotics with similar structures (sulfathiazole, sulfanilamide, sulfacetamide, sulfadiazine, sulfamerazine, sulfadimidine, sulfamethoxazole and sulfadimethoxine). The stationary phase was selected after a critical comparison of the performance achieved by three fused-core reversed phase columns (Ascentis(®) Express RP-Amide, Phenyl-Hexyl, and F5) and two monolithic columns (Chromolith(®) High Resolution RP-18 and CN). Acetonitrile and acetate buffer pH 5.0 at 0.60 mL min(-1) were used as mobile phase to perform the separations before spectrophotometric detection. The first mobile phase was successfully used as eluent from SPE column ensuring transfer of a narrow zone to the chromatographic column. Enrichment factors up to 39.2 were achieved with a 500 µL sample volume. The developed procedure showed analysis time <10.5 min, resolutions >1.83 with peak symmetry ≤1.52, LODs between 4.9 and 27 µg L(-1), linear response ranges from 30.0 to 1000.0 µg L(-1) (r(2)>0.996) and RSDs of peak heights <2.9% (n=6) at a 100 µg L(-1) level and enabled the screening control of freshwater samples contaminated at the 100 µg L(-1) level. The proposed approach expanded the analytical potentiality of SIC and avoided the time-consuming batch sample pretreatment step, thus minimizing risks of sample contamination and analyte losses.


Subject(s)
Anti-Bacterial Agents/isolation & purification , Solid Phase Extraction/instrumentation , Sulfonamides/isolation & purification , Water Pollutants, Chemical/isolation & purification , Anti-Bacterial Agents/analysis , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid/instrumentation , Equipment Design , Flow Injection Analysis/instrumentation , Limit of Detection , Rivers/chemistry , Sulfonamides/analysis , Water Pollutants, Chemical/analysis
19.
Talanta ; 129: 233-40, 2014 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25127589

ABSTRACT

This work presents the development of a fully automated flow-batch analysis (FBA) system as a new approach for on-line preconcentration, photodegradation and fluorescence detection in a lab-constructed mixing chamber that was designed to perform these processes without sample dispersion. The system positions the mixing chamber into the detection system and varies the instrumental parameters according to the required photodegradation conditions. The developed FBA system is simple and easily coupled with any sample pretreatment without altering the configuration. This FBA system was implemented to photodegrade and determine the fluorescence of the degradation products of metsulfuron methyl (MSM), a naturally non-fluorescent herbicide of the sulfonylurea׳s family. An on-line solid phase extraction (SPE) and clean up procedure using a C18 minicolumn was coupled to the photodegradation-detection mixing chamber (PDMC) that was located in the spectrofluorometer. An enrichment factor of 27 was achieved. Photodegradation conditions have been optimized by considering the influence of the elution solvent on both the formation of the photoproduct and on the fluorescence signal. Under optimal conditions, the calibration for the MSM determination was linear over the range of 1.00-7.20 µg L(-1). The limit of detection (LOD) was 0.28 µg L(-1); the relative standard deviation was 2.0% and the sample throughput for the entire process was 3h(-1). The proposed method was applied to real water samples from the Bahía Blanca׳s agricultural region (Bahía Blanca, Buenos Aires, Argentina). This method obtained satisfactory recoveries with a range of 94.7-109.8%.


Subject(s)
Arylsulfonates/analysis , Photochemistry/methods , Water/chemistry , Calibration , Green Chemistry Technology , Herbicides/analysis , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Light , Limit of Detection , Photolysis , Reproducibility of Results , Solid Phase Extraction , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Sulfonylurea Compounds/analysis , Water Pollutants/analysis
20.
Talanta ; 121: 178-86, 2014 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24607124

ABSTRACT

Estrogen steroids, represented by estradiol and its related substances, include both structurally very close and simultaneously different analogs. Their separation still remains an analytical challenge. Subcritical fluid chromatography (SbFC) on sub-2-micron particles was found to be an appropriate tool to obtain fast and efficient separation of nine target analytes. Among the four tested stationary phases charged hybrid modified with PFP (pentafluorophenyl) moiety was found to be the most convenient providing the fastest separation within 1.6 min using quick gradient elution with carbon dioxide and methanol as an organic modifier. However, complete separation was obtained also on other tested phases including bare hybrid stationary phase, hybrid stationary phase modified with 2-EP (2-ethylpyridine) and also C18, which is less typical in SbFC. The baseline separation on the latter columns was achieved by means of a temperature increase, a change in organic modifier type and gradient time increase respectively. Quantitative performance was evaluated at optimized conditions and method validation was accomplished. Excellent repeatability of both retention times (RSD<0.15%) and peak areas (RSD<1%) was observed. The method was linear in the range of 1.0-1000.0 µg/ml for all steroids with the lowest calibration point being an LOQ, except for Δ-derivatives, that provided better sensitivity and thus LOQ of 0.5 µg/ml. The sensitivity was sufficient for the analysis of real samples although it was still five times lower compared to UHPLC-UV experiments.


Subject(s)
Estrogens/isolation & purification , Chromatography, Liquid , Particle Size
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