These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Electrically driven microseparation methods for pesticides and metabolites. II: on-line and off-line preconcentration of urea herbicides in capillary electrochromatography. Author: Yang C, El Rassi Z. Journal: Electrophoresis; 1999 Sep; 20(12):2337-42. PubMed ID: 10499323. Abstract: Capillary electrochromatography (CEC) was introduced to the separation of nine important urea herbicides using octadecyl-silica (ODS) capillary columns that were specially designed to allow the realization of a relatively strong electroosmotic flow (EOF) and, in turn, fast separations. The ODS stationary phase was intentionally prepared to have a low surface coverage in octadecyl ligands in order to ensure a strong EOF. This ODS stationary phase of low surface coverage exhibited the usual reversed-phase chromatographic behavior as was manifested by the linearity of plots of log kappa versus the percent organic modifier in the mobile phase. The nature of the organic modifier of the mobile phase influenced the order of elution as well as the separation efficiency of the nine urea herbicides. Mobile phases containing acetonitrile yielded higher separation efficiency (by a factor of 1.5) than methanol-containing mobile phases. This was attributed to the higher mass transfer resistances of the solute in and out of the pores in the presence of the more viscous methanol-containing mobile phases. Due to the relatively strong affinity of the urea herbicides to the ODS stationary phase, on-line preconcentration consisting of prolonged injections allowed the determination of 10(-5) M urea herbicide samples using a UV detector without sacrificing separation efficiency. This was further decreased to 10(-7) M when the prolonged injection was preceded by the injection of a plug of water. The plug of water (the more retentive mobile phase) brought about an enhanced accumulation of the dilute samples into a narrow band at the inlet of the CEC column. When this on-column sample enrichment approach was combined with an off-line sample preconcentration step, which consisted of a solid-phase extraction process, ultra dilute samples of 10(-10) M (0.1 ppb) could be detected.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]