Science Inventory

CENTRIFUGAL PARTITION CHROMATOGRAPHIC EXTRACTION OF PHENOLS AND ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES FROM WATER SAMPLES

Citation:

Liu, Y., V. Lopez-Avila, M. Alcaraz, AND T.L. Jones. CENTRIFUGAL PARTITION CHROMATOGRAPHIC EXTRACTION OF PHENOLS AND ORGANOCHLORINE PESTICIDES FROM WATER SAMPLES. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, D.C., EPA/600/J-95/319, 1994.

Description:

As part of an ongoing evaluation of new sample preparation methods conducted by the U.S. EPA through the Environmental Monitoring Systems Laboratory in Las Vegas, especially those methods that minimize waste solvent generation, we investigated the feasibility of using centrifugal partition chromatography (CPC) to extract parts-per-billion levels of phenols and organochlorine pesticides (OCPS) from aqueous samples. n this paper, we report on the optimization of a CPC extraction technique, discuss the effects of five variables on the extraction of 13 phenols and 20 OCPS, and present recovery data for these analytes from spiked reagent water and spiked wastewater samples. ur results indicate that methylene chloride is more effective than hexane in extracting phenols buy only slightly better than hexane in extracting OCPS. PC appears to perform much better than conventional liquid-liquid extraction for phenols but not for OCPS. ur results also so that the target compounds are extracted into very small volume of solvent, which means that the CPC technique can be used to concentrate such compounds from a relatively large volume of aqueous matrix into a small volume of solvent. herefore, the CPC technique reduces extraction solvent consumption and eliminates additional sample workup.

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( REPORT )
Product Published Date:12/31/1994
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 43154