Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://etd.cput.ac.za/handle/20.500.11838/899
Title: A solid phase microextraction/gas chromatography method for estimating the concentrations of chlorpyrifos, endosulphan-alpha, edosulphan-beta and endosulphan sulphate in water
Authors: Adam, Hassan Ali 
Keywords: Chlorpyrifos -- Environmental aspects -- South Africa;Endosulfan -- Environmental aspects -- South Africa;Pesticides -- Environmental aspects -- South Africa;Water-supply, Rural -- Health aspects -- South Africa
Issue Date: 2003
Publisher: Peninsula Technikon
Abstract: The monitoring of pesticide contamination in surface and groundwater is an essential aspect of an assessment of the potential environmental and health impacts of widespread pesticide use. Previous research in three Western Cape farming areas found consistent (37% to 69% of samples) pesticide contamination of rural water sources. However, despite the need, monitoring of pesticides in water is not done due to lack of analytical capacity and the cost of analysis in South Africa. The Solid Phase Microextraction (SPME) sampling method has been developed over the last decade as a replacement for solvent-based analyte extraction procedures. The method utilizes a short, thin, solid rod of fused silica coated with an absorbent polymer. The fibre is exposed to the pesticide contaminated water sample under vigorous agitation. The pesticide is absorbed into the polymer coating; the mass absorbed depends on the partition coefficient of the pesticide between the sample phase and the polymeric coating, the exposure time and factors such as agitation rate, the diffusivity of the analyte in water and the polymeric coating, and the volume and thickness of the coating. After absorption, the fibre is directly inserted into the Gas Chromatograph (GC) injection port for analysis. For extraction from a stirred solution a fibre will have a boundary region where the solution moves slowly near the fibre surface and faster further away until the analyte is practically perfectly mixed in the bulk solution by convection. The boundary region may be modelled as a layer of stationary solution surrounded by perfectly mixed solution.
Description: Thesis (MTech (Chemical Engineering))--Peninsula Technikon, Cape Town, 2003
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11838/899
Appears in Collections:Chemical Engineering - Masters Degrees

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