Three alternative procedures for the determination of non-ionic surfactants (NS) in surface water have been developed. The simplest one consists of the filtration of water samples, the extraction of NS with ethyl acetate, the evaporation of the solvent and the determination of NS using an indirect
Studies of preservation of water samples for the determination of non-ionic surfactants
β Scribed by Andrzej Szymanski; Zbigniew Swit; Zenon Lukaszewski
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 550 KB
- Volume
- 311
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2670
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β¦ Synopsis
Chloroform, formaldehyde and ions of copperi and mercury(II) were tested as preservatives of water samples for determination of non-ionic surfactants (NS). River water (Warta River, Poznan) was used as hydrobiological background. Mainly the concentration of "native" NS from river water was measured, but in two series of experiments spikes of Triton X-100 and Marlipal 1618/25 were used. Indirect tensammetric measurements (ITM) were applied for control of the NS concentration.
Formaldehyde is the most effective compound among the tested preservatives. A concentration of 1% is sufficient for long-term storage while 0.1% is sufficient for short-term storage (up to 6 days). Copper (II) (50 mg I-') or mercury(H) (2.5 mg l-') may be used for short-term storage of water samples while chloroform used alone is ineffective. It may be used together with cooling of a sample (4" C) for short-term storage, however, such a pretreatment of samples is more complicated than the use of other preservatives. Refrigeration (4" C) used alone is ineffective. The results concerning high spikes of Triton X-100 show better preservation than the samples containing only "native" NS. Therefore, the experiments with spikes of surfactants may lead to too optimistic conclusions as for preservation of a water samples. Adsorptive stripping tensammetry was applied for observation of biodegradation of spikes of Marlipal 1618/25 both in preserved and non-preserved samples. The high potential of this technique for the examination of biodegradation has been demonstrated.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Seven binary and three multi-component mixtures of non-ionic surfactants and a mixture of ethylene glycol and PEG 400 were investigated using tensammetry with "normal" recording and one binary mixture by using "reverse" recording. Within the initial section of the I-shaped calibration graph, the inv