Abstract

Many pharmacologically active compounds are chiral species, and their therapeutic or toxicological effects might differ between isomers. Herein, we develop a fast and sensitive chiral analysis methodology for the determination of eight pharmaceuticals, considered as emerging environmental pollutants and belonging to two different chemical classes, in wastewater and sludge samples. Compounds were separated using supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) combined with time-of-flight mass spectrometry (TOF-MS) detection. The stationary phase, the modifier and the additive combined with supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2), in the SFC mobile phase, played a major effect in the enantiomeric resolution of selected compounds. Moreover, the composition of the mobile phase affected their ionization efficiency in the electrospray ionization source. Methanol (MeOH), containing a 0.1% of ammonia, was used as CO2 modifier for the separation of compounds in a polysaccharide-type column. Total analysis time was 15.5 min, achieving resolution factors between 1.03 and 2.49 for the eight pairs of enantiomers. In combination with mixed-mode solid-phase extraction and matrix solid-phase dispersion protocols, compounds were determined in wastewater and sludge samples, with limits of quantification in the range of 0.010–0.020 µg L−1 and 3.7–11.1 ng g−1, for aqueous and solid samples, respectively. The amine-type drugs (tramadol, propranolol and venlafaxine) were mostly found in wastewater samples, whilst azolic antimycotics were mainly quantified in sludge. The first group of compounds showed enantiomeric fractions significantly different to those existing in the commercial counterpart pharmaceuticals.

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