TL;DR: The analytical method presented here demonstrated its usefulness for a better understanding of sources and transport of various organic compounds in different environmental compartments and demonstrated its feasibility in detecting several important environmental sugars.
TL;DR: It was found that steric hindrance and molecular mass play a very important role in the choice of the best suited derivatization reagent: compounds with sterically hindered sites derivatized with MTBSTFA produce very small analytical responses or no signal at all, and compounds with high molecular mass produce no characteristic fragmentation pattern when derivatizing is performed with BSTFA.
TL;DR: A reliable, convenient and sensitive method was developed for the measurement of SCFA and other volatile compounds in small biological samples using sodium sulfate dehydration pretreatment and BSTFA derivatization-based GC/MS analyses.
TL;DR: The method allowed the determination of the migrating levels of bisphenols found in food cans, and it was validated for linearity, detection and quantitation limits, selectivity, accuracy and precision.
Abstract: An environmentally friendly sample pretreatment system based on solid-phase microextraction (SPME) for the sensitive determination of bisphenol A (BPA), bisphenol S (BPS) and biphenol (BP) is described. Two derivatisation reactions to obtain volatile derivatives are compared. Derivatisation with acetic anhydride (AA) was performed in situ in a 5-mM Na2CO3/NaHCO3 buffer solution and analytes were extracted by direct immersion (DI) using a PA fibre (85 µm) at 90°C for 40 min with stirring at 1,500 rpm. For derivatisation with bis-(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (BSTFA), the analytes were first extracted by DI using the PA fibre at 70°C for 40 min with stirring at 500 rpm. The fibre was then removed, dried in a nitrogen stream for 2 min and introduced into the headspace of BSTFA at 50°C for 30 s. After derivatisation, the analytes were desorbed in the injection port of the GC in the splitless mode at 280°C for 4 min. The separation was carried out by coupling gas chromatography with mass spectrometry in the selected ion monitoring mode, GC-MS(SIM). The method allowed the determination of the migrating levels of bisphenols found in food cans, and it was validated for linearity, detection and quantitation limits, selectivity, accuracy and precision. Detection limits ranged from 3 to 16 pg mL−1, depending on the compound, at a signal-to-noise ratio of 3. Recoveries obtained for spiked samples were satisfactory for all compounds. Levels of BPA were higher than those of BPS and the lowest contents were found for BP.
TL;DR: GC-MS and GC-MS-MS were used to determine 4-NP, 4-tert.-octylphenol (4-t-OP), bisphenol A, estradiol-17beta, estriol estrone, testosterone, 17alpha-ethynylestradioL cholesterol,Coprostan-3-ol, coprostan and coproStan- 3-one in both surface water and wastewater after derivatization with N,O-