A novel extraction technique was reported. The solid phase material, nanofiber, was prepared by electrospinning using polystyrene. Twenty different drugs (10 microg/L in water) were extracted using 1 mg of nanofibers within 5 min. The analytes can be desorpted from the fibers with 50 microL of the methanol and then monitored by LC coupled to a UV detector. Packed-fiber SPE (PFSPE) provide high recoveries (>50%) for some relatively non-polar drugs (log P >1.5) (n-octanol-to-water partition ratio), and relatively low recoveries (9.9-39.8%) for the drugs within the log P window below 1. Experimental optimization of the technique has been carried out using seven representative drugs, edaravone, cinchonine, quinine, voriconazole, chlordiazepoxide, verapamil, and rutonding. Except for edaravone, the maximum yields of seven drugs (0.2 microg/L) from water samples were approximately 100%, and were 33.7-88.2% from human plasma. The advantageous aspect of the technique encompasses high throughput, high sensitivity, simplicity, low cost, and green chemistry.
The processes (2S)→␥ cJ , cJ →pp (Jϭ0,1,2) are studied using a sample of 14ϫ10 6 (2S) decays collected with the Beijing Spectrometer at the Beijing Electron-Positron Collider. Very clear c0 , c1 and c2 signals are observed, and the branching fractions B( cJ →pp ) (Jϭ0,1,2) are determined to be (27.1 Ϫ3.9 ϩ4.3 Ϯ4.7)ϫ10 Ϫ5 , (5.7 Ϫ1.5 ϩ1.7 Ϯ0.9)ϫ10 Ϫ5 , and (6.5 Ϫ2.1 ϩ2.4 Ϯ1.0)ϫ10 Ϫ5 , respectively, where the first errors are statistical and the second are systematic.
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