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Electromagnetically-vibrated solid-phase microextraction for analysis of aqueous-miscible organic compound transport in soil columns

Authors
Joo, Jin ChulShackelford, Charles D.Reardon, Kenneth F.Lee, Won Tae
Issue Date
Jan-2021
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
Column tests; Electromagnetic vibration; Equilibrium extraction; Organic compound mixtures; Pore-water sample; Solid-phase microextraction
Citation
CHEMOSPHERE, v.263
Journal Title
CHEMOSPHERE
Volume
263
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/kumoh/handle/2020.sw.kumoh/18545
DOI
10.1016/j.chemosphere.2020.127941
ISSN
0045-6535
Abstract
Current methods of sampling pore water from soil columns to determine solute concentrations are slow and require relatively large volumes. Accordingly, an electromagnetically-vibrated (EMV) solid-phase microextraction (SPME) device was evaluated for determining temporal and spatial distributions of solute pore-water concentrations (solute concentration profiles) for four organic compounds, two polar (2-hexanone, 2,4-dimethyl phenol) and two nonpolar (toluene, 1,4-dichlorobenzene), in columns packed with simulated aquifer sands with different fractions of organic carbon. In batch equilibrium extraction tests, the equilibrium extraction time of the organic compounds in aqueous mixtures decreased from 30 to less than 10 min as the frequency of electromagnetic vibration increased from zero to 250 Hz. Mixture effects were not statistically significant (p > 0.05) in the extraction process using EMV SPME. Comparisons of the solute concentration profiles within the soil columns at different elapsed times measured by pore-water samples and in situ EMV SPME extractions revealed both methods were equally effective. However, EMV SPME extraction removed no solution volume and only 0.6-14% of the solute mass removed by the pore-water sample collections, substantially minimizing disturbances to solute transport and fate. Thus, the equilibrium extraction-based calibration method using EMV SPME offers an effective approach for rapidly and accurately determining solute concentration profiles in column tests with negligible solute mass loss and minimal solution flow disturbance. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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