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An assessment of the liquid-gas partitioning behavior of major wastewater odorants using two comparative experimental approaches: liquid sample-based vaporization vs. impinger-based dynamic headspace extraction into sorbent tubes

Title
An assessment of the liquid-gas partitioning behavior of major wastewater odorants using two comparative experimental approaches: liquid sample-based vaporization vs. impinger-based dynamic headspace extraction into sorbent tubes
Author
Jan Edward Szulejko
Keywords
Odorants; Vaporization; Dynamic headspace; Impinger system; Relative recovery; Wastewater; VOLATILE FATTY-ACIDS; SOLID-PHASE MICROEXTRACTION; ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS; CHROMATOGRAPHY; PERFORMANCE; INTERFACE; LEACHATES; SYSTEM; VOCS; MS
Issue Date
2014-01
Publisher
SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
Citation
ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2014, 406(2), P.643-655
Abstract
The gas?liquid partitioning behavior of major odorants (acetic acid, propionic acid, isobutyric acid, n-butyric acid, i-valeric acid, n-valeric acid, hexanoic acid, phenol, p-cresol, indole, skatole, and toluene (as a reference)) commonly found in microbially digested wastewaters was investigated by two experimental approaches. Firstly, a simple vaporization method was applied to measure the target odorants dissolved in liquid samples with the aid of sorbent tube/thermal desorption/gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. As an alternative method, an impinger-based dynamic headspace sampling method was also explored to measure the partitioning of target odorants between the gas and liquid phases with the same detection system. The relative extraction efficiency (in percent) of the odorants by dynamic headspace sampling was estimated against the calibration results derived by the vaporization method. Finally, the concentrations of the major odorants in real digested wastewater samples were also analyzed using both analytical approaches. Through a parallel application of the two experimental methods, we intended to develop an experimental approach to be able to assess the liquid-to-gas phase partitioning behavior of major odorants in a complex wastewater system. The relative sensitivity of the two methods expressed in terms of response factor ratios (RFvap/RFimp) of liquid standard calibration between vaporization and impinger-based calibrations varied widely from 981 (skatole) to 6,022 (acetic acid). Comparison of this relative sensitivity thus highlights the rather low extraction efficiency of the highly soluble and more acidic odorants from wastewater samples in dynamic headspace sampling.
URI
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00216-013-7489-6http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11754/46655
ISSN
1618-2642
DOI
10.1007/s00216-013-7489-6
Appears in Collections:
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING[S](공과대학) > CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING(건설환경공학과) > Articles
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