Nanostructured alkyl carboxylic acid-based restricted access solvents: Application to the combined microextraction and cleanup of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in mosses

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Author
Caballero-Casero, Noelia
Çabuk, Hassan
Martínez-Sagarra, Gloria
Devesa, Juan A.
Rubio, Soledad
Publisher
ElsevierDate
2015Subject
Restricted access materialsRestricted access liquids
Supramolecular solvents
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Liquid chromatography-fluorescence detection
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Show full item recordAbstract
Alkyl carboxylic acid-based nanostructured solvents, synthesized in mixtures of tetrahydrofuran (THF)
and water through self-assembly and coacervation, were proved to behave as restricted access liquids.
Both physical and chemical mechanisms were found responsible for exclusion of macromolecules such as
proteins and polysaccharides. The potential of these solvents for extracting small molecules from
complex solid samples, without interference from large biomolecules, was here evaluated. For this
purpose, they were applied to the extraction of 14 priority polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from
mosses prior to their separation by liquid chromatography and fluorescence detection (LC-FLD). Sample
treatment involved the vortex shaking of 200 mg of moss with 200 mL of decanoic acid-based solvent for
5 min, subsequent centrifugation for 8 min and analysis of the extract by LC-FLD using external calibration.
Proteins precipitated during extraction because of both the decrease of the dielectric constant of
the solution caused by THF and the formation of macromolecular complexes with decanoic acid. Polysaccharides
were not solubilized in the aqueous cavities of the solvent because of their size exclusion. Inhouse
method validation was performed according to the recommendations of the European Commission
Decision 202/657/EC. Method detection and quantification limits for the different PAHs were in the
ranges 0.04e0.24 and 0.14e0.80 mg kg 1, respectively. The method was applied to the determination of
different moss species collected in both polluted and unpolluted sites in the South of Spain. Recoveries were within the range 71e110%. The results obtained show that solvents with restricted access properties
have the potential to expand the scope of application of restricted access materials to areas other
than biological fluids because of their suitability to combine analyte isolation and sample cleanup of solid
samples in a single step.