Solid ink-printed filter paper as a green adsorbent material for the solid-phase extraction of UV filters from water samples

Abstract

<p>This work describes the development of a new green solid-phase extraction approach, which is based on the use of low-cost extraction discs composed of plain filter papers that are covered with a synthetic wax-like coating. The filter papers are printed in a commercial solid ink printer, which dispenses a synthetic wax-like ink on the surface of the paper, to cover the hydrophilic cellulose fibre matrix with an interface of lipophilic domains where non-polar analytes can partition through hydrophobic interactions. The modified paper filters were used to extract hydrophobic organic compounds from water samples following the customary procedure of solid-phase extraction without sorbent preconditioning and needless of high-vacuum sources. As a proof-of-concept application, a series of non-polar organic UV filters were used as model analytes to optimise the extraction parameters and evaluate the performance of the method in spiked water samples. Based on this principle, a new sample preparation platform with low environmental footprint has been developed that enables extraction to be carried out using low-cost, environmental benign and non-toxic conventional materials. The advantages and disadvantages of the method, alongside with its future prospects towards the development of custom-made ‘printed extraction kits’, are envisioned and discussed.</p

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