posted on 2021-08-26, 19:13authored byDel Koch, Kevin L. Clark, John Owen, Clark D. Chickering, Robert Plastridge, Paul Hendley, Tianbo Xu
Synthetic pyrethroids
are frequently detected as trace contaminants
in sediment and natural waters. Because of the importance of measuring
both total and freely available concentrations for ecotoxicity evaluations,
solid-phase microextraction (SPME) combined with gas chromatography–mass
spectrometry using negative chemical ionization (NCI-GC-MS) was investigated
as an analytical technique. Automated SPME-NCI-GC-MS quantification
of freely dissolved (and thus potentially bioavailable) pyrethroids
in aqueous samples containing dissolved organic matter (DOM) was successfully
applied. The introduction of stable isotope-labeled pyrethroid calibration
standards into the water sample allows for the simultaneous determination
of total concentrations. Because pyrethroids adsorb rapidly to container
walls (especially in calibration standard solutions without DOM) it
was necessary to develop a technique to minimize the resulting time-dependent
losses from calibration standard solutions in autosampler vials as
they await analysis. A staggered preparation of these analytical calibration
standards immediately prior to analysis was shown to ameliorate this
problem. The developed method provides accurate and reproducible results
for aqueous samples containing a range of dissolved organic matter
concentrations (e.g., sediment pore water or sediment/water mixtures)
and yields practical benefits in comparison to conventional analysis
methods, such as reduced sample volume requirements, reduced solvent
consumption, and fewer sample manipulations, and makes simultaneous
measurements of freely dissolved/bioavailable pyrethroids and total
pyrethroids possible.