Loading…

Dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction using a low transition temperature mixture and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of pesticides in urine samples

•A new dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction method was developed using a low transition temperature mixture.•A liquid mixture at room temperature was obtained mixing choline chloride and sesamol in molar ratio 1:3.•Choline chloride and sesamol (1:3) mixture was successfully used as solvent for t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Chromatography A 2021-04, Vol.1642, p.462036, Article 462036
Main Authors: Gallo, Valeria, Tomai, Pierpaolo, Gherardi, Monica, Fanali, Chiara, De Gara, Laura, D'Orazio, Giovanni, Gentili, Alessandra
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:•A new dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction method was developed using a low transition temperature mixture.•A liquid mixture at room temperature was obtained mixing choline chloride and sesamol in molar ratio 1:3.•Choline chloride and sesamol (1:3) mixture was successfully used as solvent for the microextraction of pesticides from urine.•Pesticides were recovered with good recovery efficiencies. Biomonitoring is a potent tool to control the health risk of people occupationally and non-occupationally exposed. The latest trend in bioanalytical chemistry is to develop quick, cheap, easy, safe and reliable green analytical procedures to analyse a large number of chemicals in easily accessible biomatrices such as urine. In this paper, a new dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (DLLME) procedure, conceived to treat urine samples and based on the use of a low transition temperature mixture (LTTM), was developed and validated to analyse twenty pesticides commonly used in farm practises. The LTTM was composed of choline chloride and sesamol in molar ratio 1:3 (ChCl:Ses 1:3); its characterization via differential scanning calorimetry identified it as an LTTM and not as a deep eutectic solvent due to the occurrence of a glass transition at -71 °C. The prepared mixture was used as the extraction solvent in the DLLME procedure, while ethyl acetate as the dispersing solvent. The salting out effect (50 mg mL−1 of NaCl in a diluted urine sample) improved the separation phase and the analyte transfer to the extractant. Due to the high ionic strength and despite the density of ChCl:Ses 1:3 (1.25 g mL−1), the LTTM layer floated on the top of the sample solution after centrifugation. All extracts were analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry. After optimization and validation of the whole method, lower limits of quantitation were in the range of 0.02 – 0.76 µg  L−1. Extraction recoveries spanned from 50 to 101 % depending on the spike level and analytes. Precision and accuracy ranges were 3-18% and 5-20%, respectively. The extraction procedure was also compared with other methods, showing to be advantageous for rapidity, simplicity, efficiency, and low cost. Finally, urine samples from ten volunteers were effectively analysed using the developed method.
ISSN:0021-9673
DOI:10.1016/j.chroma.2021.462036