Journal of Environmental Chemistry
Online ISSN : 1882-5818
Print ISSN : 0917-2408
ISSN-L : 0917-2408
Originals
Determination of Iminoctadine Residues in Water Samples by Liquid Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry and Its Behavior in Aquatic Environment
Hirotaka NAITOHSatoshi KADOWAKI
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2011 Volume 21 Issue 1 Pages 49-56

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Abstract
A liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometric (LC/MS/MS) procedure for the determination of fungicide1,1′-[iminodi (octamethylene)]di-guanidine (iminoctadine) in water samples has been developed. A direct derivatization of iminoctadine in watetr samples with benzoyl chloride (C6H5COCl) was applied to the procedure for the quantitative detection, in order to prevent the loss of iminoctadine in analytical processes because of the absorption activities. Iminoctadines in a water sample were treated with C6H5COCl to form the benzoate derivative, and then the derivative was extracted into dichloromethane. The extract was cleaned up using a florisil cartridge column, and the eluate was exchanged to acetonitrile. The derivative of iminoctadine in acetonitrile solution was determined by LC/MS/MS. The method detection limit for iminoctadine was 0.22 ng/L and the mean recoveries in water samples ranged from 80 to 101 % (c.v. 4.0-8.9 %). It was found that this method enables the reliable determination of iminoctadine residues in water samples at ppt level and is superior in sensitivity and reliability to the HPLC postcolumn derivatization fluorescence detection method which is the official analytical method for iminoctadine in Japan.
Moreover, to clear the behavior of iminoctadine in aquatic environment, a river water sample was fractionated into hydrophobic and hydrophilic fractions, and recovery tests of iminoctadine added to the fractions were conducted using this determination method. The results showed that the behavior of iminoctadine in aquatic environment is affected not only by suspended substances but by aquatic fumic substances of humic and fulvic acids. Some of iminoctadine in aquatic environment are likely incorporated into aquatic fumic substances by hydrogen bond or combining with them to form amides.
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© 2011 Japan Society for Environmental Chemistry
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