The Evaluation of Solid-Phase Microextraction(SPME) Techniques for Analyzing Mixed Fuel Oxygenates and Products

  • 이재선 (경기대학교 토목환경공학부 환경공학과) ;
  • 이시진 (경기대학교 토목환경공학부 환경공학과) ;
  • 장순웅 (경기대학교 토목환경공학부 환경공학과)
  • Published : 2003.09.01

Abstract

Solid-phase microextraction (SPME) and gas chromatography/headspace techniques(HS) and flame ionization detection (GC/FID) have been combined for determination of very polar compounds in water, including the widely used gasoline oxygenates and by-products. A relatively simple extraction method using a CAR/PDMS(75${\mu}{\textrm}{m}$) SPME fiber was optimized for the routine analysis of gasoline oxygenates and by-products in groundwater and reagent water. A sodium chloride concentration of 25%(w/w) combined with an extraction time of 20 min provided the greatest sensitivity while maintaining analytical efficiency Replicate analyses in fortified reagent and groundwater spiked with microgram per liter concentrations of gasoline oxygenates and by-products indicate quantitative and reproducible recovery of these and related oxygenate compounds. Method dynamic range was 50$\mu\textrm{g}$ L-1 to 3000$\mu\textrm{g}$ L-1 for gasoline oxygenates and by-products.

Keywords