Abstract

Cationic surfactant (CS+) in urban river water and sediment was extracted and determined spectrophotometrically with 2 membrane filters. The CS+ in the water samples, mostly in the form of an ion associate with the coexisting anionic surfactant (AS), was collected on a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membrane filter and eluted with methanol. Bromphenol blue (BPB), hydrochloric acid, and water were added to the methanol solution successively, and the mixed solution was filtered through a mixed cellulose ester membrane filter. The CS+-BPB- ion associate, formed by a counter ion exchange, was collected on the filter and dissolved into N,N-dimethylformamide (DMF) together with the mixed cellulose ester membrane filter. After addition of 2 drops of triethanolamine, the absorbance of the DMF solution was measured. The CS+ in sediment samples was extracted with methanol by ultrasonic irradiation; the methanol solution was then passed through a PTFE membrane filter and evaporated to dryness. The CS+ was redissolved in a small amount of methanol. For water samples, recoveries and relative standard deviations for 0.30 microM benzyldimethyl-tetradecylammonium ion, a standard material, were > or =93 and < or =5%, with a detection limit of 0.02 microM. Concentrations of CS+ in sediments were much higher than those in water samples, indicating that CS+ is adsorbed on the surface of the sediment.

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