6533b858fe1ef96bd12b6d47

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Supported liquid membrane extraction with single hollow fiber for the analysis of fluoroquinolones from environmental surface water samples

Piotr WieczorekAnna PoliwodaMałgorzata Krzyżak

subject

DanofloxacinAnalytical chemistrySodium ChlorideBiochemistryHigh-performance liquid chromatographyDiluentSensitivity and SpecificityAnalytical ChemistryRiversmedicinehollow fiberenvironmental samplesSample preparationfluoroquinolonesChromatography High Pressure LiquidDetection limitChromatographysample preparationChemistryOrganic ChemistryExtraction (chemistry)Reproducibility of ResultsMembranes ArtificialGeneral MedicineHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationAnti-Bacterial Agentssupported liquid membrane extractionWater treatmentHydrochloric AcidEnrichment factorWater Pollutants Chemicalmedicine.drug

description

Abstract In this work, the simple analytical method for the determination of four fluoroquinolone antibiotics: ciprofloxacin, enrofloxacin, norfloxacin and danofloxacin, in environmental surface water samples is described. Sample pretreatment step was performed by the application of a technique based on supported liquid membrane extraction with the configuration of single hollow fiber (HF-SLM). The HPLC system with diode array detection was used for final analysis of studied analytes. Various parameters affecting the extraction efficiency during HF-SLM enrichment, such as type of membrane diluent, pH of donor (sample) and acceptor phases, as well as an enrichment time and salt content of sample were studied. Using the presented hollow-fiber extraction high recovery (70–80%) was achieved. It gave enrichment factor above 100. The detection limits in surface water samples, for the four target antibiotics, were at range 0.01–0.02 μg/l, when 10 ml samples were processed. The obtained results demonstrate the applicability of presented method for the selective extraction of fluoroquinolones in environmental water samples at ultratrace level. Errors, expressed as relative standard deviation (RSD) were below 8%, for all tested concentration levels.

10.1016/j.chroma.2010.03.051https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0021967310004346?via=ihub