Rapid determination of three textile surfactants in environmental samples by modeling excitation-emission second-order data with multi-way calibration methods.

Autor: Martínez, Ramón A., Fechner, Diana C., Delfino, Mario R., Pellerano, Roberto G., Goicoechea, Héctor C.
Předmět:
Zdroj: Environmental Science & Pollution Research; Apr2022, Vol. 29 Issue 17, p25869-25880, 12p
Abstrakt: The textile industry is an important potential source of environmental pollution due to the use of chemical products. Dyes, hydrolyzed dyes, and surfactants, among others, are chemical compounds present in wastewater of textile plant. Moreover, the anionic surfactants have toxic effects for various aquatic organisms even in low concentrations. The methodologies investigated to quantify surfactants, in general, consume a lot of analysis time and frequently use toxic or environmentally objectionable reagents. For these reasons, the objective of this work was to develop a quick and simple method to quantify surfactants without the use of expensive reagents and equipment, avoiding extraction and preconcentration stages. The proposed method is based on fluorescent spectroscopy measurements for the acquisition of second-order data in excitation-emission matrices and multivariate calibration techniques applied to the data. The unfolded partial least squares combined to residual bilinearization (U-PLS/RBL) algorithm was better than parallel factor analysis (PARAFAC). U-PLS/RBL accurately quantified alkylnonylphenolethoxylated (APEO), dodecylbenzenesulfonic acid (ADBS), and 2-phenoxy-ethoxylated fatty alcohol (AGFE) surfactants. The chemometric model obtained good analytical figures of merit: REP% between 5 and 13 and LOQ between 0.45 and 2.77 μg mL-1. This methodology had no significant difference compared with results obtained by a HPLC-FD reference technique, in addition with a considerable reduction in analysis time, reagent consumption, and therefore lower cost. For environmental applications, APEO, ADBS, and AGFE were quantify in textile wastewater treatment and in the receiving water body. The concentrations varied from 8.73 to 73.94 μg mL-1 in the textile wastewater and were not detected in the receiving water body. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index