Lipophilic organic material: An apparatus for extracting solids used for their concentration from sea water.
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Date
1987Author
Ehrhardt, M.
Status
PublishedPages
14pp.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Lipophilic
organic
substances,
whether
man-made,
mobilized
by
human
activities,
or
of
recent
natural
origin,
are
usually
dissolved
in
sea
water
at
such
minute
concentrations
that
the
chemical
characterization
and
quantitative
determination
of
single
compounds
are
possible
only
after
a
sufficient
quantity
has
been
collected
by
concentration
from
relatively
large
(of
the
order
of
100-1000
litres)
volumes.
Essentially
two
techniques
have
found
widespread
application
in
marine
organic
chemistry
and
pollution
research,
i.e.,
extraction,
either
batchwise
or
continuous,
with
a
suitable
water-immiscible
solvent
(Duinker
and
Hillebrand,
1983,
and
references
cited
therein)
or
sorption
onto
solids
(Duinker
and
Hillebrand
1983,
loco
cit.;
Ehrhardt,
1983).
Described
below
is
a
new
apparatus
and
technique
for
purifying
sorbant
material
from
substances
interfering
with
ultra-trace
ana.....
Resource URL
Publisher: http://ices.dk/publications/library/Publisher
International Council for the Exploration of the Sea (ICES)Copenhagen, Denmark
Series;Nr
ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences; 4Document Language
enBest Practice Type
Standard Operating ProcedureGuide
ISSN
0903–2606Citation
Ehrhardt, M. (1987) Lipophilic organic material: An apparatus for extracting solids used for their concentration from sea water. ICES Techniques in Marine Environmental Sciences, No. 4, 14pp. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25607/OBP-266Collections