Search results for "Peat"

showing 10 items of 1026 documents

Validated, non-destructive and environmentally friendly determination of cocaine in euro bank notes.

2005

A non-destructive, fast and environmentally friendly procedure has been developed for cocaine determination in euro bank notes. Cocaine was extracted with 15 ml methanol by vortex agitation during 5 min. The extract was evaporated and reconstituted in 0.5 ml methanol. GC-MS-MS analysis was performed using as precursor ion m/z 182.2, with an excitation energy voltage of 1.60 eV, being the product ions measured m/z 150.2 and 82.0. A limit of detection of 0.15 ng per note and a repeatability of 6%, established from the relative standard deviation, of a 1 ng ml(-1) level, were achieved. Recoveries of 101+/-2 and 98+/-3% were obtained for samples spiked with 100 and 10 microg respectively. Resul…

Detection limitPaperChromatographyOrganic ChemistryForensic SciencesAnalytical chemistryReproducibility of ResultsGeneral MedicineRepeatabilityBiochemistryEnvironmentally friendlySensitivity and SpecificityGas Chromatography-Mass SpectrometryAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCocaineSample preparationMethanolGas chromatographyGas chromatography–mass spectrometryQuantitative analysis (chemistry)Journal of chromatography. A
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Quality control of pharmaceuticals containing clenbuterol by thermal lens spectrometry.

1996

An ultrasensitive absorptiometric procedure for the determination of clenbuterol in pharmaceutical preparations was developed. Clenbuterol was diazotized with nitrite and coupled with 1-(naphthyl)ethylenediamine, and the absorbance of the azo dye formed was measured by both spectrophotometry and ultrasensitive thermal lens spectrometry (TLS). The TLS limit of detection was 1.5 ppb, 14-fold lower than with a Hewlett-Packard diode array spectrophotometer. Thus, the TLS procedure can be advantageously applied to quality control of clenbuterol at the individual dose level and in small samples. Repeatability as relative standard deviation was 1.5% (50 ppb, n = 6).

Detection limitQuality ControlChromatographymedicine.diagnostic_testClinical BiochemistryPharmaceutical ScienceRepeatabilityAdrenergic beta-AgonistsMass spectrometryAnalytical ChemistryAbsorbancechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryClenbuterolSpectrophotometryDrug DiscoverymedicineClenbuterolSpectrophotometry UltravioletDerivatizationQuantitative analysis (chemistry)Spectroscopymedicine.drugTabletsJournal of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis
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Photo-induced chemiluminescence-based determination of diphenamid by using a multicommuted flow system

2007

This manuscript deals with the application of molecular connectivity calculations to predict the photo-induced chemiluminescent behaviour of the family of herbicides grouped as amides. Several compounds of this group were theoretically studied by means of a general discriminant equation formerly obtained, being 18 of them (plus eight from the chloroacetanilide sub-group) predicted with a high probability as photo-induced chemiluminescent. Empirical confirmation of the chemiluminometric behaviour was performed with some few commercially available amide herbicides. On the basis of these results, a new multicommutation-photo-chemiluminescent method is proposed for the determination of the diph…

Detection limitReproducibilityChromatographyChemistryAnalytical chemistryRepeatabilityAnalytical Chemistrylaw.inventionchemistry.chemical_compoundSodium hydroxidelawAmideCalibrationPhotodegradationChemiluminescenceTalanta
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Multimycotoxin LC-MS/MS Analysis in Tea Beverages after Dispersive Liquid-Liquid Microextraction (DLLME).

2017

The aim of the present study was to develop a multimycotoxin liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method with a dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction procedure (DLLME) for the analysis of AFs, 3aDON, 15aDON, NIV, HT-2, T-2, ZEA, OTA, ENNs, and BEA in tea beverages and to evaluate their mycotoxin contents. The proposed method was characterized in terms of linearity, limits of detection (LODs), limits of quantification (LOQs), recoveries, repeatability (intraday precision), reproducibility (interday precision), and matrix effects to check suitability. The results show LODs in the range of 0.05-10 μg/L, LOQs in the range of 0.2-33 μg/L, and recoveries in the range of 65…

Detection limitReproducibilityChromatographyTeaChemistryLiquid Phase Microextraction010401 analytical chemistryFood Contamination04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesGeneral ChemistryRepeatabilityMycotoxinsGreen tea040401 food science01 natural sciences0104 chemical scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyLiquid chromatography–mass spectrometryLimit of DetectionTandem Mass SpectrometryLc ms msLiquid liquidGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesMycotoxinJournal of agricultural and food chemistry
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Capillary zone electrophoresis for the determination of thiabendazole, prochloraz and procymidone in grapes

2001

Capillary zone electrophoresis with UV detection was applied to the simultaneous determination of thiabendazole, prochloraz and procymidone in grapes. Electrolyte conditions such as pH, composition and concentration of the buffer, addition of organic solvent and working voltage were checked to obtain a high-performance separation of the three fungicides (by measurement of separation efficiency and resolution). The most critical parameter was the pH of the running buffer. The best separation was achieved in 4 mM phosphate solution at pH 3.5. The repeatability of the migration times, expressed as RSD, was <0.44%. The three peaks were completely resolved with a separation efficiency up to 100 …

Detection limitResidue (complex analysis)ChromatographyChemistryExtraction (chemistry)ImidazolesAnalytical chemistryElectrophoresis CapillaryRepeatabilityBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryBridged Bicyclo Compoundschemistry.chemical_compoundCapillary electrophoresisThiabendazoleElectrochemistryEnvironmental ChemistryVitisProcymidoneTheoretical plateSolid phase extractionSpectroscopyThe Analyst
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Optimization of transmission near infrared spectrometry procedures for quality control of pesticide formulations

2006

The use of different response functions to be optimized in the frame of the use of near infrared spectrometry for quality control of active principles in agrochemical formulations has been evaluated. Both, simple functions, based on parameters like sensitivity, repeatability, accuracy, signal to noise ratio, limit of detection or sample throughput, and a complex function, considering all the aforementioned aspects, were employed in the development of a new method for Iprodione determination in agrochemicals. Optimization strategies were based on the previous screening of the most important instrumental factors like number of cumulated scans, nominal resolution, mirror velocity and zero fill…

Detection limitResolution (mass spectrometry)ChemistryRepeatabilityFactorial experimentBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistrySignal-to-noise ratioStatisticsCalibrationEnvironmental ChemistrySensitivity (control systems)Biological systemThroughput (business)SpectroscopyAnalytica Chimica Acta
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Polydopamine-coated magnetic nanoparticles for the determination of nitro musks in environmental water samples by stir bar sorptive-dispersive microe…

2021

Magnetic-based microextraction approaches have gained popularity in recent years due to the magnetic properties of the extraction phases allowing to handle them easier and more efficiently. This work describes a magnetic-based analytical method for the determination of the family of nitro musks in environmental water samples. These compounds have been of great concern due to their environmental impacts and potential health effects. The method is based on stir bar sorptive-dispersive microextraction (SBSDME) as extraction approach, prior to thermal desorption coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis (TD-GC-MS). For this purpose, polydopamine-coated cobalt ferrite magnetic nan…

Detection limitSorbentChromatographyChemistry010401 analytical chemistryExtraction (chemistry)Thermal desorption02 engineering and technologyRepeatability021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyMass spectrometry01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesAnalytical ChemistryIonic strengthMagnetic nanoparticles0210 nano-technologyTalanta
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On Ibn Ezra's Procedure and Shapley Value

2014

We examine ibn Ezra's procedure (Rabinovitch 1973; O'Neill 1982) historically used to solve the Rights Arbitration problem in the general framework of bankruptcy problems. When the greatest claim is larger than or equal to the estate, the procedure is a maximal game (Aumann 2010). However, when the greatest claim is smaller than the estate, the axioms of efficiency (the whole estate is distributed) and satiation are difficult to satisfy simultaneously. We discuss both axioms to show that their importance and necessity are radically different. From then, for the part of the estate not covered by the greatest claim, we examine four possible procedures: the minimal overlap rule, Alcalde et al.…

Dictator gameUnanimityEconomicsArbitrationRepeated gameEstateShapley valueGame theoryMathematical economicsAxiomSSRN Electronic Journal
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Development of a new peat-based oil sorbent using peat pyrolysis

2013

The growing use and transport of crude oil and oil products has led to increasing numbers of oil spillages of various scales. Oil sorbents have been extensively used for remediation of the consequences of such accidents. The aim of this study is to investigate the possible use of peat and its thermal treatment products for oil sorption. Peat as an oil sorbent has poor buoyancy characteristics, relatively low oil sorption capacity and low hydrophobicity. However, thermal treatment (low-temperature pyrolysis and synthesis of peat-based activated coal) helps to significantly improve its sorptive characteristics. Peat is a potential material for oil sorption because it has such advantages as lo…

Differential Thermal AnalysisHot TemperaturePeatSorbentWaste managementEnvironmental remediationSorptionGeneral MedicinePulp and paper industrycomplex mixturesThermogravimetryKineticsSoilPetroleumSpecific surface areaSoil PollutantsEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceAdsorptionPorosityWaste Management and DisposalPyrolysisEnvironmental Restoration and RemediationWater Science and TechnologyEnvironmental Technology
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On Sturmian Graphs

2007

AbstractIn this paper we define Sturmian graphs and we prove that all of them have a certain “counting” property. We show deep connections between this counting property and two conjectures, by Moser and by Zaremba, on the continued fraction expansion of real numbers. These graphs turn out to be the underlying graphs of compact directed acyclic word graphs of central Sturmian words. In order to prove this result, we give a characterization of the maximal repeats of central Sturmian words. We show also that, in analogy with the case of Sturmian words, these graphs converge to infinite ones.

Discrete mathematicsApplied MathematicsCDAWGsContinued fractionsSturmian wordSturmian wordsCharacterization (mathematics)RepeatsDirected acyclic graphCombinatoricsIndifference graphSturmian words CDAWGs Continued fractions RepeatsChordal graphComputer Science::Discrete MathematicsDiscrete Mathematics and CombinatoricsContinued fractionWord (group theory)Computer Science::Formal Languages and Automata TheoryReal numberMathematics
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