Automating the Analysis of Selected Phenols Using The Focus Sample Processing Robot
Applications | | GL SciencesInstrumentation
Monitoring phenolic compounds is essential due to their toxicity and prevalence in water sources. Traditional solvent extraction methods are labor-intensive and require large volumes of solvents, motivating the development of automated workflows to improve safety, throughput, and sustainability.
The study evaluates an automated approach for extracting and derivatizing selected phenols from aqueous samples using the Focus XYZ Sample Processing Robot. Key goals include reducing sample volume from 200 mL to 15 mL, achieving detection limits below 100 ng/L for pentachlorophenol, and maintaining or improving precision and recovery compared to manual procedures.
In the automated protocol, 15 mL of aqueous sample is combined with borax buffer and a 13C-labeled pentachlorophenol internal standard. The robot dispenses 2 mL of pentafluorobenzoyl chloride in 2,2,4-trimethylpentane for derivatization, followed by dual-direction vortex mixing, phase separation, emulsion breaking, and large-volume injection of 100 µL of the organic layer into the GC-MS system.
The automated method exhibited a linear range of 0–200 µg/L for all target phenols. Pentachlorophenol spiked at 100 ng/L in river water showed 7.8 % RSD. The estimated detection limit after automated extraction was 25 ng/L. Relative recoveries at 200 ng/L ranged from 97.1 % in effluent to 104 % in borehole water. The total cycle time per sample was approximately 55 minutes.
Further miniaturization and integration with high-throughput autosamplers can broaden applicability to diverse analytes. Advances in robotics and data analytics may enable real-time monitoring and decision support in environmental and industrial quality-control settings.
The automated Focus XYZ workflow matches or surpasses manual extraction in precision and recovery while significantly reducing solvent use and labor. It provides a robust solution for efficient monitoring of phenolic contaminants in various water matrices.
GC/MSD, GC/SQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, GL Sciences
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Monitoring phenolic compounds is essential due to their toxicity and prevalence in water sources. Traditional solvent extraction methods are labor-intensive and require large volumes of solvents, motivating the development of automated workflows to improve safety, throughput, and sustainability.
Objectives and Study Overview
The study evaluates an automated approach for extracting and derivatizing selected phenols from aqueous samples using the Focus XYZ Sample Processing Robot. Key goals include reducing sample volume from 200 mL to 15 mL, achieving detection limits below 100 ng/L for pentachlorophenol, and maintaining or improving precision and recovery compared to manual procedures.
Methodology and Sample Preparation
In the automated protocol, 15 mL of aqueous sample is combined with borax buffer and a 13C-labeled pentachlorophenol internal standard. The robot dispenses 2 mL of pentafluorobenzoyl chloride in 2,2,4-trimethylpentane for derivatization, followed by dual-direction vortex mixing, phase separation, emulsion breaking, and large-volume injection of 100 µL of the organic layer into the GC-MS system.
Used Instrumentation
- ATAS Focus XYZ Sample Processing Robot
- ATAS OPTIC 2-200 Programmable Injector
- HP 5972 GC-MS System
Results and Discussion
The automated method exhibited a linear range of 0–200 µg/L for all target phenols. Pentachlorophenol spiked at 100 ng/L in river water showed 7.8 % RSD. The estimated detection limit after automated extraction was 25 ng/L. Relative recoveries at 200 ng/L ranged from 97.1 % in effluent to 104 % in borehole water. The total cycle time per sample was approximately 55 minutes.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Reduced solvent consumption and smaller sample volumes enhance sustainability.
- Automated processing decreases manual labor and variability.
- High precision and recovery support regulatory compliance in environmental monitoring.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Further miniaturization and integration with high-throughput autosamplers can broaden applicability to diverse analytes. Advances in robotics and data analytics may enable real-time monitoring and decision support in environmental and industrial quality-control settings.
Conclusion
The automated Focus XYZ workflow matches or surpasses manual extraction in precision and recovery while significantly reducing solvent use and labor. It provides a robust solution for efficient monitoring of phenolic contaminants in various water matrices.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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