Abstract

Graphene-carbon nanosphere composite (G@CNS) was prepared via a simple hydrothermal method. The G@CNS nanocomposite was characterized by X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscope, surface area, and porosity analysis. The G@CNS was applied as a new sorbent for solid-phase extraction of five carbamate pesticides (tsumacide, carbaryl, isoprocarb, bassa, diethofencarb) prior toquantitative determination by high-performance liquid chromatography with ultraviolet detection at 208nm. Some experimental parameters including desorption conditions, sample pH, sample volume, and loading rate were studied carefully. Under the optimized condition, the method provided good linearity ranging from 0.3 to 100.0ngmL-1 with low limits of detection of 0.10-0.20ngmL-1 for grape juice, 0.10-0.30ngmL-1 for blend fruit juice, and 0.10-0.20ngmL-1 for water sample. Good method recoveries (80.2-110%) with relative standard deviations less than 7.2% and high enrichment factors (167-293) were achieved. Results demonstrated that this novel G@CNS can serve as a promising alternative sorbent for more applications. In this work, a graphene-carbon nanosphere (G@CNS) composite was synthesized via a simple hydrothermal method. Then, the G@CNS was served as a novel sorbent for solid-phase extraction of five carbamate pesticides (tsumacide, carbaryl, isoprocarb, bassa, diethofencarb) in juice and environmental water samples, followed by their quantitative analysis with high-performance liquid chromatography-ultraviolet detection.

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