Abstract

A novel approach is presented, whereby gold nanostructured screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCnAuEs) are combined with in-situ ionic liquid formation dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (in-situ IL-DLLME) and microvolume back-extraction for the determination of mercury in water samples. In-situ IL-DLLME is based on a simple metathesis reaction between a water-miscible IL and a salt to form a water-immiscible IL into sample solution. Mercury complex with ammonium pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate is extracted from sample solution into the water-immiscible IL formed in-situ. Then, an ultrasound-assisted procedure is employed to back-extract the mercury into 10µL of a 4M HCl aqueous solution, which is finally analyzed using SPCnAuEs.Sample preparation methodology was optimized using a multivariate optimization strategy. Under optimized conditions, a linear range between 0.5 and 10µgL−1 was obtained with a correlation coefficient of 0.997 for six calibration points. The limit of detection obtained was 0.2µgL−1, which is lower than the threshold value established by the Environmental Protection Agency and European Union (i.e., 2µgL−1 and 1µgL−1, respectively). The repeatability of the proposed method was evaluated at two different spiking levels (3 and 10µgL−1) and a coefficient of variation of 13% was obtained in both cases. The performance of the proposed methodology was evaluated in real-world water samples including tap water, bottled water, river water and industrial wastewater. Relative recoveries between 95% and 108% were obtained.

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