2 research outputs found
Catalog of total excitation-emission and total synchronous fluorescence maps with synchronous fluorescence spectra of homologated fluorescent pesticides in large use in Morocco: development of a spectrometric low cost and direct analysis as an alert method in case of massive contamination of soils and waters by fluorescent pesticides
The purpose of this research is to develop a direct
spectrometric approach to monitor soils and waters, at a lower
cost than the widely used chromatographic techniques; a
spectrometric approach that is effective, reliable, fast, easy to
implement, and without any use of organic solvents whose
utilization is subject to law limitation. It could be suitable at
least as an alert method in case of massive contamination.
Here, we present for the first time a catalog of excitation–
emission and total synchronous fluorescence maps that may
be considered as fingerprints of a series of homologated
pesticides, in large use in Morocco, aiming at a direct detection
of their remains in agricultural soils and neighboring
waters. After a large survey among farmers, agricultural
workers and product distributors in two important agricultural
regions of Morocco (Doukkala-Abda and Sebou basin), 48
commercial pesticides, which are fluorescent, were chosen. A
multi-component spectral database of these targeted commercial
pesticides was elaborated. For each pesticide, dissolved in
water at the lowest concentration giving a no-noise fluorescence
spectrum, the total excitation-emission matrix (TEEM),
the total synchronous fluorescence matrix (TSFM) in addition
to synchronous fluorescence spectra (SFS) at those offsets
giving the highest fluorescence intensity were recorded. To
test this preliminary multi-component database, two real soil
samples, collected at a wheat field and at a vine field in the
region of Doukkala, were analyzed. Remains of the commercial
Pirimor (Carbamate) and Atlantis (Sulfonylurea) were
identified by comparison of the recorded TEEM, TSFM, and
SFS to those of the preliminary catalog at one hand, and on the
basis of the results of a field pre-survey. The developed
approach seems satisfactory, and the fluorimetric fingerprint
database is under extension to a higher number of fluorescent
pesticides in common use among the Moroccan agricultural
regions