Title of article :
Graphene Oxide-Based Dispersive-Solid Phase Extraction for Preconcentration and Determination of Ampicillin Sodium and Clindamycin Hydrochloride Antibiotics in Environmental Water Samples Followed by HPLC-UV Detection
Author/Authors :
Mohammad Nejad, Leila Department of Toxicology - Faculty of Medical Sciences - Tarbiat Modares University Tehran, Iran , Pashaei, Yaser Young Researchers and Elite Club - Tehran Medical Sciences, Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran , Daraei, Bahram Department of Toxicology and Pharmacology - Faculty of Pharmacy - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Forouzesh, Mehdi Legal Medicine Research Center - Legal Medicine Organization, Tehran, Iran , Shekarchi, Maryam Food and Drug Laboratory Research Center - Food and Drug Organization, MOH & ME, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
In this work, a reusable graphene oxide (GO) based dispersive-solid phase extraction
(d-SPE) was synthesized and used for the analysis of trace ampicillin sodium (AMP) and
clindamycin hydrochloride (CLI) in water samples followed by high performance liquid
chromatography-UV detection (HPLC-UV). Batch experiments were conducted to investigate
the effects of pH and volume of the sample solution, contact time, adsorption isotherms,
temperature, and desorption conditions. The maximum adsorption capacities of AMP and CLI
on GO nanosheets were found to be 33.33 mg g-1 and 47 mg g-1, respectively. The adsorption
isotherm data can be well fitted by Temkin (AMP and CLI) and Freundlich (AMP), and the
adsorption process followed the pseudo-second-order model. The thermodynamic parameters
were calculated, indicated that the adsorption process of both analytes were spontaneous and
exothermic. In addition, the d-SPE following HPLC analyses showed good linearity in the
range of 0.5-200 ng mL-1 (R2= 0.999) for AMP and 1-200 ng mL-1 (R2= 0.999) for CLI, with
LOD of 0.04 and 0.24 ng mL-1 for AMP and CLI, respectively. The percent of extraction
recoveries, intra and inter-day precisions (expressed as RSD %, n = 3) were in the range of
96.4-101.6%, 2.2-3.0, and 3.7-4.7 for AMP as well as 94.2-98.6%, 2.2-3.8, and 3.5-4.6 for
CLI, respectively. The preconcentration factor of 20 was achieved for both analytes. From
these results, it can be concluded that the validated method is a simple, cost-effective and
repeatable method for analysis of AMP and CLI in water samples and provide a new platform
for antibiotics decontamination.
Keywords :
HPLC-UV , Environmental water samples , Adsorption isotherm , Clindamycin hydrochloride , Ampicillin sodium , Dispersive-solid phase extraction , Graphene oxide nanosheets
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics