A. Dicorcia et al., DETERMINATION OF PHENOL POLLUTANTS IN WATER AT TRACE LEVELS - EXTRACTION BY A REVERSIBLE GRAPHITIZED CARBON-BLACK CARTRIDGE, Journal of AOAC International, 77(2), 1994, pp. 446-453
A method for determining the 11 phenols designated as priority polluta
nts by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency at the parts-per-trill
ion level in water sampled from the environment is described. Drinking
(2 L), ground (1.5 L), and river (0.5 L) water samples are preconcent
rated by passing them through a 1 g graphitized carbon black (GCB) rev
ersible cartridge at a flow rate of approximately 70 mL/min. After the
GCB cartridge is washed with 1.5 mt methanol to eliminate water, the
cartridge is reversed and then back-flushed with an acidic CH2Cl2-CH3O
H mixture for eluting phenols. After partial solvent removal, the samp
le is subjected to reversed-phase liquid chromatography with UV detect
ion by either a conventional or a diode-array detector. Recoveries of
phenols added to 2 L of drinking water at levels between 0.05 and 4 mu
g/L were higher than 90%. Compared with an octadecyl bonded silica (C
-18) cartridge, the GCB cartridge had a far better extraction efficien
cy for the more highly water-soluble phenols. The extent to which the
presence of fulvic acids in water affected the recovery of the phenols
considered was investigated.