Abstract
This work showcases a novel application of biochar for analytical sample treatment. The carbonaceous material, obtained by pyrolysis of orange peel waste (550°C) without any post-synthesis treatment or functionalization, was thoroughly characterized and easily immobilized on the inner wall of sampling tubes in order to perform a sort of “in-vial” solid-phase extraction (SPE). The as-obtained device was tested for the extraction of seven sexual steroids, as probe water pollutants, from tap, lake, river water and wastewater treatment plant effluent samples spiked with 0.2-5 µg L−1 of each compound. The sorption kinetics profiles showed quantitative uptake from the sample (25 mL) in 20 min contact time, followed by complete elution in pure ethanol (2 mL, 15 min), thanks to the proper balance between sorption affinity and ease of elution. Under the selected conditions, recovery was in the range 60-123 %, with good inter-day precision (RSD 10-18 %, n=3). As evidence of the excellent reproducibility, an overall RSD below 15 % was observed from inter-day inter-batch recovery tests on three individually prepared sampling tubes. The procedure, carried out on a roller mixer, allows 10 samples to be extracted simultaneously, improving the sample throughput. Moreover, reusability tests showed that the same device maintains its efficiency for 10 consecutive sorption/desorption cycles. The greenness assessment, carried out by two dedicated software, further supported the sustainability of this biochar-based sample preparation as an alternative SPE.
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