Dispersive Liquid-Liquid Microextraction With Extractant Removal By Magnetic Nanoparticles For Chloramphenicol Preconcentration In Water Samples

Cite this dataset

Yahaya, Noorfatimah ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3079-7837, Md Saad, Salwani ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7774-2956, Aling, Nur Afiqah, Miskam, Mazidatulakmam ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9757-0883, Saaid, Mardiana ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6122-6554, Mohamad Zain, Nur Nadhirah ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7222-7341, Kamaruzaman, Sazlinda ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6299-8767, Raoov, Muggundha ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0304-0617, Mohamad Hanapi, Nor Suhaila ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2947-3314 and Wan Ibrahim, Wan Nazihah (2020) Dispersive Liquid-Liquid Microextraction With Extractant Removal By Magnetic Nanoparticles For Chloramphenicol Preconcentration In Water Samples. [Dataset]

Description

This work describes the development of a new methodology based on dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction with extractant removal by magnetic nanoparticles (DLLME-MNPs) for preconcentration and extraction of chloramphenicol (CAP) antibiotic residues in water. The approach is based on the use of decanoic acid as the extraction solvent followed by the application of MNPs to magnetically retrieve the extraction solvent containing the extracted CAP. The coated MNPs were then desorbed with methanol, and the clean extract was analysed using UV-Vis spectrophotometry. Several important parameters, such as the amount of decanoic acid, extraction time, stirring rate, amount of MNPs, type of desorption solvent, salt addition, and sample pH, were evaluated and optimized. Optimum parameters were as follows: amount of decanoic acid: 200 mg; extraction time: 10 min; stirring rate: 800 rpm; amount of MNPs: 60 mg; desorption solvent: methanol; salt: 10%; and sample pH, 8. Under the optimum conditions, the method demonstrated acceptable linearity (R2 = 0.9933) over a concentration range of 50 to 1000 µg L–1. Limit of detection and limit of quantification were 16.5 and 50.0 µg L–1, respectively. Good analyte recovery (91–92.7%) and acceptable precision with good RSDs (0.45–6.29%, n = 3) were obtained. The method was successfully applied to tap water and lake water samples. The proposed method is rapid, simple, reliable, and environmentally friendly for the detection of CAP.

Metadata


Item Type: Dataset
ID Number : 91
Creators: Noorfatimah Yahaya and Salwani Md Saad and Nur Afiqah Aling and Mazidatulakmam Miskam and Mardiana Saaid and Nur Nadhirah Mohamad Zain and Sazlinda Kamaruzaman and Muggundha Raoov and Nor Suhaila Mohamad Hanapi and Wan Nazihah Wan Ibrahim
Contact Email Address: wannazihah@uitm.edu.my
Keywords: Chloramphenicol Spectrophotometry dispersive liquid-liquid microextraction magnetic nanoparticles water samples
Subjects: Science and Technology > Applied Sciences
Research Fields: Biological, Chemical and Mathematical Sciences
Date: 20 March 2020
Date Deposited: 24 Nov 2025 06:37
Identification Number (DOI): doi.org/10.5061/dryad.hdr7sqvdp
URI: http://data.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/91
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