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Application of graphene nanoplatelets silica composite, prepared by sol–gel technology, as a novel sorbent in two microextraction techniques
Author(s) -
Heidari Mahmoud,
Bahrami Abdolrahman,
Ghiasvand Ali Reza,
Shahna Farshid Ghorbani,
Soltanian Ali Reza,
Rafieiemam Maryam
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of separation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.72
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1615-9314
pISSN - 1615-9306
DOI - 10.1002/jssc.201500975
Subject(s) - solid phase microextraction , sorbent , detection limit , materials science , extraction (chemistry) , composite number , chromatography , graphene , silica gel , desorption , siloxane , relative humidity , sample preparation , analytical chemistry (journal) , gas chromatography–mass spectrometry , adsorption , chemistry , mass spectrometry , composite material , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , polymer , physics , thermodynamics
In this study, the application of a novel nanomaterial composite was investigated in two microextraction techniques of solid‐phase microextraction and a needle trap device in a variety of sampling conditions. The optimum sampling temperature and relative humidity were 10°C and 20%, respectively, for both techniques with two sorbents of graphene/silica composite and polydimethyl siloxane. The two microextraction techniques with the proposed sorbent showed recoveries of 95.2 and 94.6% after 7 days. For the needle trap device the optimums desorption time and temperature were 3 min at 290°C and for SPME these measures were 1 and 1.5 min at 240–250°C for the graphene/silica composite and polydimethyl siloxane, respectively. The relative standard division obtained in inter‐ and intra‐day comparative studies were 3.3–14.3 and 5.1–25.4, respectively. For four sample the limit of detection was 0.021–0.25 ng/mL, and the limit of quantitation was 0.08–0.75 ng/mL. The results show that the graphene/silica composite is an appropriate extraction media for both techniques. Combining an appropriate sorbent with microextraction techniques, and using these in conjunction with a sensitive analytical instrument can introduce a strong method for sampling and analysis of occupational and environmental pollutants in air.
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