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Selective concentration of aromatic bases from water with a resin adsorbent

January 1, 1983

Aromatic bases are concentrated from water on columns of a resin adsorbent and recovered by aqueous-acid elution. The degree of concentration attainable depends on the ratio of the capacity factor (k) of the neutral form of the amine to that of the ionized form. Capacity factors of ionic forms of amines on XAD-8 resin (a methylacrylic ester polymer) are greater than zero, ranging from 20 to 250 times lower than those of their neutral forms; they increase with increasing hydrophobicity of the amine. Thus, desorption by acid is an edition (k during desorption >0) rather than a displacement (k during desorption = 0) process. The degree of concentration attainable on XAD-8 resin varies with the hydrophobicity of the amine, being limited for hydrophilic solutes (for example, pyridine) by small neutral-form k's, reaching a maximum for amines of intermediate hydrophobicity (for example, quinoline), and decreasing for more hydrophobc solutes (for example, acridine) because of their large ionic-form k's.

Publication Year 1983
Title Selective concentration of aromatic bases from water with a resin adsorbent
DOI 10.1021/ac00252a029
Authors H. A. Stuber, Jerry A. Leenheer
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Analytical Chemistry
Index ID 70012037
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse