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This book offers a practical and theoretical approach to Solvent Microextraction (SME). It helps analytical chemists evaluate SME for a given sample preparation. Introductory chapters overview Sample Preparation and the various tools and machinery used in SME, before moving to Kinetics and Thermodynamics. The book then describes practical methods, offering a detailed "how to" on SME when dealing with: gaseous samples, liquid samples, solid samples, environmental, and food and pharmaceutical among others. This text provides both a handy desk-reference in the laboratory as well as an…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book offers a practical and theoretical approach to Solvent Microextraction (SME). It helps analytical chemists evaluate SME for a given sample preparation. Introductory chapters overview Sample Preparation and the various tools and machinery used in SME, before moving to Kinetics and Thermodynamics. The book then describes practical methods, offering a detailed "how to" on SME when dealing with: gaseous samples, liquid samples, solid samples, environmental, and food and pharmaceutical among others. This text provides both a handy desk-reference in the laboratory as well as an indisposable instructional tool.
This book offers both a practical as well a theoretical approach to Solvent Microextraction (SME) and will help analytical chemists to evaluate SME for a given sample preparation. Introductory chapters overview a comparison of SME with other sample preparation methods, a summary of the technical aspects, and a detailed theoretical treatment of SME. The book then describes the practical aspects of the technique, with detailed "how to" chapters devoted to the preparation and analysis of atmospheric, solid and liquid environmental, clinical and industrial samples. This text will serve as both a handy laboratory desk-reference and an indispensible instructional tool.
Autorenporträt
JOHN M. KOKOSA, retired Professor of Chemistry at Kettering University, Flint, Michigan, conducts research in solvent microextraction, is an industrial consultant, and is an Adjunct Professor of Chemistry at Mott Community College in Flint. He was among the first scientists to explore headspace-solvent microextraction, chaired an invited symposium on solvent microextraction at PittCon 2006, and holds the U.S. patent for the automation of SME sampling. He is the author of numerous refereed publications and presentations and has authored a laboratory manual for freshmen organic chemistry and a commercial FTIR database for Thermo Nicolet instruments. ANDRZEJ PRZYJAZNY is a Professor of Chemistry at Kettering University, Flint, Michigan. He has an MS and DSc in chemistry from the Gdänsk University of Technology (Poland) and a PhD in chemistry from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. Dr. Przyjazny specializes in analytical chemistry of organic environmental pollutants and has published over fifty papers in refereed journals on this subject. He was one of the first scientists to explore headspace-solvent microextraction. MICHAEL A. JEANNOT worked directly on the original development of drop-based SME at the University of Alberta, and has continued research in this area during his tenure at St. Cloud State University. He has coauthored five SME articles with a theoretical focus for Analytical Chemistry and the Journal of Chromatography A.