Liquid chromatographic method for determination of water in soils and the optimization of anion separations by capillary zone electrophoresis

Thumbnail Image
Date
1994
Authors
Benz, Nancy
Major Professor
Advisor
James S. Fritz
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Altmetrics
Authors
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Organizational Unit
Chemistry

The Department of Chemistry seeks to provide students with a foundation in the fundamentals and application of chemical theories and processes of the lab. Thus prepared they me pursue careers as teachers, industry supervisors, or research chemists in a variety of domains (governmental, academic, etc).

History
The Department of Chemistry was founded in 1880.

Dates of Existence
1880-present

Related Units

Journal Issue
Is Version Of
Versions
Series
Department
Chemistry
Abstract

A liquid chromatographic method for the determination of water in soil and clay samples is presented. Methanol is used to extract water from the sample. The water is then separated from matrix components on a cation-exchange column via an ion-exclusion mechanism and determined using indirect spectrophotometric detection. The detection scheme is based on the acid-catalyzed equilibrium established in the eluent when trans-cinnamaldehyde reacts with methanol to produce trans-cinnamaldehyde dimethyl acetal and water. Initially, the equilibrium lies toward the acetal which has a low absorbance at the detection wavelength. The equilibrium is shifted toward the cinnamaldehyde when a sample containing water is introduced into the system. An increase in absorbance proportional to the shift in equilibrium and the amount of water present in the sample is observed. Conditions are optimized for the fast and accurate determination of water in soil and clay samples;Capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE) is an effective method for separating ionic species according to differences in their electrophoretic mobilities. CZE is used to separate inorganic and short-chain organic acid anions under conditions of reversed electroosmotic flow (EOF). These separations are usually achieved using a relatively high concentration (e.g. >0.25 mM) of a quaternary ammonium salt added to the electrolyte solution to reverse the EOF. It is now shown that excellent separations of these anions are obtained using low concentrations of a quaternary ammonium salt (e.g. 0.03 mM) and 1-butanol (e.g. 4%) to reverse the EOF;CZE separations of anions with similar electrophoretic mobilities are often difficult. It is usually necessary to modify the composition of the electrolyte solution in order to improve the separation resolution. The effect of pH and organic solvent on EOF and electrophoretic mobility is studied. Separations of several alkyl-substituted phenolate ions are optimized by changing the pH and the percentage of acetonitrile in the electrolyte solution. By studying electrophoretic mobility as a function of pH and percentage acetonitrile, optimum separation conditions are determined.

Comments
Description
Keywords
Citation
Source
Subject Categories
Copyright
Sat Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 1994