Abstract

An oil type emulsion containing tiny encapsulated droplets of hydrochloric acid has been used for the concentration of traces of copper(II) ions in water. Milligram quantities of oxine and a non-ionic surfactant (Span-80) were dissolved in 5-10 ml of chloroform and mixed vigorously with 3 ml of 1 mol/l hydrochloric acid by ultrasonic irradiation. The resulting water-in-oil type emulsion was gradually added to 50-500 ml of water sample and dispersed by stirring as numerous small globules (0.1 to 0.5 mm in diameter). The copper diffused through the chloroform layer into the small droplets of hydrochloric acid, which occurred quantitatively in the sample of pH 3-10. After separating the emulsion by sedimentation, it was demulsified by heating to segregate the aqueous and organic phases. The copper in the aqueous phase was successfully determined by GFAAS. The emulsion method allows to perform both extraction and back-extraction more easily and rapidly than the conventional liquid-liquid extraction method.

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