Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water

Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology, 2010. === Water storage dams play an important part in the collection and purification of water destined for human consumption. However, the nutrient rich silt in these dams promotes rapid growt...

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Main Author: Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi
Other Authors: Moodley, Kandasamy Govindsamy
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10321/555
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-dut-oai-localhost-10321-5552016-04-21T04:10:53Z Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi Moodley, Kandasamy Govindsamy Chetty, Deenadayalan Kisten High performance liquid chromatography Glyphosate--Separation Aquatic plants--Effect of glyphosate on Herbicides--Separation Water--Pollution--South Africa--KwaZulu-Natal Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology, 2010. Water storage dams play an important part in the collection and purification of water destined for human consumption. However, the nutrient rich silt in these dams promotes rapid growth of aquatic plants which tend to block out light and air. Glyphosate is universally used as the effective non-selective herbicide for the control of aquatic plants in rivers and dams. Invariably there is residual glyphosate present in water after spraying of dams and rivers with glyphosate herbicide. The amount of residual glyphosate is difficult to determine on account of high solubility of glyphosate in water. Thus a method of sample preparation and a sensitive HPLC method for the detection of trace amounts of glyphosate and its major metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) in water is required. A crucial step in sample preparation is pre-column derivitization of glyphosate with 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC-Cl). For sample pretreatment, water samples were derivatized with FMOC-Cl at pH 9, extracted with ethyl acetate and sample clean-up was carried out by passing a sample through the SPE cartridge. For SPE, recovery studies were done to choose a suitable cartridge for glyphosate and AMPA analysis. The following cartridges were compared, namely, C18, Oasis HLB and Oasis MAX SPE cartridges. Best recoveries (101% for glyphosate and 90% for AMPA) were obtained using 500 mg of C18 solid-phase extraction cartridge. The eluent from SPE cartridge was injected into HPLC column. Three types of separation columns (namely; C18 column, silica based amino column and polymeric amino column) were compared for the separation of glyphosate and AMPA. The best separation of glyphosate and AMPA in water samples was achieved using a polymeric amino column and a mobile phase at pH 10 which contained a mixture of acetonitrile and 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 10) 55:45, (v/v) respectively. The method was validated by spiking tap water , deionized water and river water at a level of 100 μg/l. Recoveries were in the range of 77% -111% for both analytes. The method was also used in determining the levels of glyphosate and AMPA in environmental samples. This method gave detection limits of 3.2 μg/l and 0.23 μg/l for glyphosate and AMPA respectively. The limits of quantification obtained for this method were 10.5 μg/l and 3.2 μg/l for glyphosate and AMPA respectively. Eskom Tertiary Education Support Programme (TESP) Durban University of Technology. 2010-11-18T10:16:42Z 2012-09-01T22:20:06Z 2010 Thesis 332133 http://hdl.handle.net/10321/555 en 148 p
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic High performance liquid chromatography
Glyphosate--Separation
Aquatic plants--Effect of glyphosate on
Herbicides--Separation
Water--Pollution--South Africa--KwaZulu-Natal
spellingShingle High performance liquid chromatography
Glyphosate--Separation
Aquatic plants--Effect of glyphosate on
Herbicides--Separation
Water--Pollution--South Africa--KwaZulu-Natal
Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi
Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
description Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Masters Degree in Technology, 2010. === Water storage dams play an important part in the collection and purification of water destined for human consumption. However, the nutrient rich silt in these dams promotes rapid growth of aquatic plants which tend to block out light and air. Glyphosate is universally used as the effective non-selective herbicide for the control of aquatic plants in rivers and dams. Invariably there is residual glyphosate present in water after spraying of dams and rivers with glyphosate herbicide. The amount of residual glyphosate is difficult to determine on account of high solubility of glyphosate in water. Thus a method of sample preparation and a sensitive HPLC method for the detection of trace amounts of glyphosate and its major metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid (AMPA) in water is required. A crucial step in sample preparation is pre-column derivitization of glyphosate with 9-fluorenylmethyl chloroformate (FMOC-Cl). For sample pretreatment, water samples were derivatized with FMOC-Cl at pH 9, extracted with ethyl acetate and sample clean-up was carried out by passing a sample through the SPE cartridge. For SPE, recovery studies were done to choose a suitable cartridge for glyphosate and AMPA analysis. The following cartridges were compared, namely, C18, Oasis HLB and Oasis MAX SPE cartridges. Best recoveries (101% for glyphosate and 90% for AMPA) were obtained using 500 mg of C18 solid-phase extraction cartridge. The eluent from SPE cartridge was injected into HPLC column. Three types of separation columns (namely; C18 column, silica based amino column and polymeric amino column) were compared for the separation of glyphosate and AMPA. The best separation of glyphosate and AMPA in water samples was achieved using a polymeric amino column and a mobile phase at pH 10 which contained a mixture of acetonitrile and 0.05 M phosphate buffer (pH 10) 55:45, (v/v) respectively. The method was validated by spiking tap water , deionized water and river water at a level of 100 μg/l. Recoveries were in the range of 77% -111% for both analytes. The method was also used in determining the levels of glyphosate and AMPA in environmental samples. This method gave detection limits of 3.2 μg/l and 0.23 μg/l for glyphosate and AMPA respectively. The limits of quantification obtained for this method were 10.5 μg/l and 3.2 μg/l for glyphosate and AMPA respectively. === Eskom Tertiary Education Support Programme (TESP) Durban University of Technology.
author2 Moodley, Kandasamy Govindsamy
author_facet Moodley, Kandasamy Govindsamy
Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi
author Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi
author_sort Madikizela, Lawrence Mzukisi
title Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
title_short Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
title_full Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
title_fullStr Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
title_full_unstemmed Optimisation of HPLC-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
title_sort optimisation of hplc-based methods for the separation and detection of herbicide glyphosate and its major metabolite in water
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10321/555
work_keys_str_mv AT madikizelalawrencemzukisi optimisationofhplcbasedmethodsfortheseparationanddetectionofherbicideglyphosateanditsmajormetaboliteinwater
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