Abstract

Alkylbenzenesulfonates together with soap are the most widely used anionic surfactants. Linear alkylbenzenesulfonates (LAS) were introduced in the mid-1960s as substitutes for the poorly biodegradable tetrapropylenebenzenesulfonates (TPS). A method is presented for the selective and quantitative determination of LAS and TPS in recent sediments. Alkylbenzenesulfonates were extracted from sediments using methanol. The methanolic extract was passed through a strong anionic exchange column. The alkylbenzenesulfonates contained in the acidic eluate were then derivatized to their corresponding trifluoroethyl esters and quantitatively determined by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry using positive chemical ionization. Limits of quantitation for 10 g sediment samples varied between 1.5 and 21 μg/kg of dry sediment for single LAS isomers and between 71 and 220 μg/kg for total LAS. Limits of quantitation for the total of TPS were at ∼200 μg/kg. Relative standard deviations of replicate analyses typically ranged from 5 to 10%. Recovery rates of LAS in spiked sediment samples ranged from 79 to 113%. The presented method was applied to surface and subsurface sediments also containing long-chain (C(14)-C(16))-LAS and mixtures of LAS and TPS.

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