Magnetic ionic liquids as non-conventional extraction solvents for the determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
Date
2016Abstract
This work describes the applicability of magnetic ionic liquids (MILs) in the analytical determination of a
group of heavy polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. Three different MILs, namely, benzyltrioctylammonium bromotrichloroferrate (III) (MIL A), methoxybenzyltrioctylammonium bromotrichloroferrate (III) (MIL B), and 1,12-di(3-benzylbenzimidazolium) dodecane bis[(trifluoromethyl)
sulfonyl)]imide bromotrichloroferrate (III) (MIL C), were designed to exhibit hydrophobic properties, and
their performance examined in a microextraction method for hydrophobic analytes. The magnet-assisted
approach with these MILs was performed in combination with high performance liquid chromatography
and fluorescence detection. The study of the extraction performance showed that MIL A was the most
suitable solvent for the extraction of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and under optimum conditions
the fast extraction step required ~20 mL of MIL A for 10 mL of aqueous sample, 24 mmol L1 NaOH, high
ionic strength content of NaCl (25% (w/v)), 500 mL of acetone as dispersive solvent, and 5 min of vortex.
The desorption step required the aid of an external magnetic field with a strong NdFeB magnet (the
separation requires few seconds), two back-extraction steps for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
retained in the MIL droplet with n-hexane, evaporation and reconstitution with acetonitrile. The overall
method presented limits of detection down to 5 ng L1
, relative recoveries ranging from 91.5 to 119%, and
inter-day reproducibility values (expressed as relative standard derivation) lower than 16.4% for a spiked level of 0.4 mg L1 (n ¼ 9). The method was also applied for the analysis of real samples, including tap
water, wastewater, and tea infusion