Abstract
This study describes the synthesis and characterization of a magnetic cellulose gold nanocomposite (MCNC@Au) for magnetic solid phase (m-SPE) extraction of total sulfur content in liquid fuel samples followed by analysis using inductively coupled plasma-optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). The nanocomposite was prepared using an in situ co-precipitation method and characterization results from FTIR, P-XRD, TEM and SEM-EDX techniques confirmed the formation of the targeted nanocomposite. To achieve good extraction efficiency, the 2-level half-fractional factorial design and central composite design were used to investigate the most influential parameters of the proposed m-SPE method. The multivariate optimization results showed that efficient extraction was obtained when 27.5 mg sorbent mass, 35 minutes sorption time, 200 μL eluent volume and 8 min elution time were used. The optimal parameters resulted in excellent accuracy (98.8%), precision (1.7%), LOD (0.039 mg L-1), LOQ (0.129 mg L-1), MDL (0.014 μg g-1) and MQL (0.047 μg g-1). The optimized and validated m-SPE method was applied in real fuel oil samples, revealing a total sulfur content range of 13.20 ± 0.05-15.70 ± 0.02 μg g-1 for crude oil, 7.32 ± 0.01-9.12 ± 0.03 for μg g-1, 8.41 ± 0.02-9.15 ± 0.06 μg g-1 for gasoline and 9.10 ± 0.02 and 9.70 ± 0.04 μg g-1 for kerosene samples, sugesting high concentration levels of sulfur in crude oils. However, the obtained sulfur content levels are within the accepted standards in fuel oils, except for those of crude oil and kerosene samples. Therefore, the proposed m-SPE method followed by ICP-OES analysis has proven to be an alternative procedure for rapid and selective quantification of total sulfur in fuel samples.
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