Abstract

In the analysis of tert-butyldimethylsilyl derivatives (IBDMS) of alkyl methylphosphonic acids (RMPA) and methylphosphonic acid (MPA), from soils by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS), the detection yields are generally low, due to the suppression of TBDMS derivatization by the soil matrix components and the adsorption of RMPA and MPA to the soils. An ion-exchange pretreatment of the aqueous soil extract can be used to overcome the former factor by removing interfering compounds. A pretreatment method is described for improving the detection yields due to the latter factor, using an alkaline extraction procedure. The recovery was estimated quantitatively using capillary electrophoresis. The soil samples tested included volcanogenous immature soils and showed a low aqueous extraction recovery and GC/MS detection yields. The inclusion of sodium hydroxide in the extraction solvent dramatically increased the recovery. Using a 0.1 M sodium hydroxide solution, the recovery was in excess of 68%. Interfering components were removed from the alkaline soil extract by solid-phase extraction of the acids on a silica-based strong anion exchanger. The alkaline soil extract was neutralized with hydrofluoric acid and applied to the cartridge in the fluoride form. After washing with water, MPA and RMPA could be eluted with methanolic ammonia nearly quantitatively. Using the established pretreatment method, MPA and RMPA were detected from all the soil samples in more than 67% yield.

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