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  • Title: Capillary gas chromatography with atomic emission detection for pesticide analysis in soil samples.
    Author: Viñas P, Campillo N, López-García I, Aguinaga N, Hernández-Córdoba M.
    Journal: J Agric Food Chem; 2003 Jun 18; 51(13):3704-8. PubMed ID: 12797730.
    Abstract:
    A method for the simultaneous determination of 10 pesticides (organochlorines, organophosphorus compounds, and pyrethrins) in soils using capillary gas chromatography with atomic emission detection (GC-AED) is reported. Soil samples are first "cleaned-up" with 25 mL of an ascorbic acid solution (pH 2.15). The aqueous phase is extracted with ethyl acetate, and the solid residue is then extracted twice with 10 mL of ethyl acetate. The three resultant organic extracts are combined, concentrated to dryness, and reconstituted in 1 mL of acetone. The pesticides are selectively detected by monitoring chlorine and bromine in the first run and sulfur emission line wavelength in the second run. Each chromatographic run takes 19 min. Detection limits are between 25 and 75 pg, depending on the compound, which corresponds to 1.7 and 5.0 ng/g in the soil samples, respectively. Recoveries of the pesticides from spiked preparations result in an overall mean recovery of 95.3% (n = 120) at fortification levels ranging from 10 to 60 ng/g, depending on the compound. The method is reliable and can be useful for routine monitoring in soils.
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