posted on 2017-10-30, 00:00authored byWei Chen, Yanying Li, Chang-Er Chen, Andrew J. Sweetman, Hao Zhang, Kevin C. Jones
Widespread
use of organic chemicals in household and personal care
products (HPCPs) and their discharge into aquatic systems means reliable,
robust techniques to monitor environmental concentrations are needed.
The passive sampling approach of diffusive gradients in thin-films
(DGT) is developed here and demonstrated to provide in situ quantitative
and time-weighted average (TWA) measurement of these chemicals in
waters. The novel technique is developed for HPCPs, including preservatives,
antioxidants and disinfectants, by evaluating the performance of different
binding agents. Ultrasonic extraction of binding gels in acetonitrile
gave good and consistent recoveries for all test chemicals. Uptake
by DGT with HLB (hydrophilic–lipophilic-balanced) as the binding
agent was relatively independent of pH (3.5–9.5), ionic strength
(0.001–0.1 M) and dissolved organic matter (0–20 mg
L–1), making it suitable for applications across
a wide range of environments. Deployment time and diffusion layer
thickness dependence experiments confirmed DGT accumulated chemicals
masses are consistent with theoretical predictions. The technique
was further tested and applied in the influent and effluent of a wastewater
treatment plant. Results were compared with conventional grab-sampling
and 24-h-composited samples from autosamplers. DGT provided TWA concentrations
over up to 18 days deployment, with minimal effects from biofouling
or the diffusive boundary layer. The field application demonstrated
advantages of the DGT technique: it gives in situ analyte preconcentration
in a simple matrix, with more quantitative measurement of the HPCP
analytes.