Significant efforts are being made to develop more practical and versatile approaches for the preconcentration and purification of complex chemical samples. Inspired by the naturally occurring enrichment of organic compounds in sea aerosols, in this study we demonstrate the potential of induced bubble bursting as an approach for the preconcentration of organic solutes in various aqueous solutions. Apart from the preconcentration of organics, notable decrease in the concentration of metal salt components was discovered for the first time. On the basis of a series of model experiments, the phenomenon has been attributed to intermolecular competition at the surface interface of rising bubbles. Overall, our results indicate the high versatility and simplicity of the bubble bursting approach for the simultaneous preconcentration and desalting of organic solutes in aqueous solutions for mass spectrometry, chromatography, optical detection, and other fields of analysis.
Exhaled breath contains chemicals that have a diagnostic value in human pathologies. Here in vivo breath analysis of creatinine has been demonstrated by constructing a novel platform based on extractive electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (EESI-MS) without sample pretreatment. Under optimized experimental conditions, the limit of creatinine detection in breath was 30.57 ng L(-1), and the linear range of detection was from 0.3 μg L(-1) to 100 μg L(-1). The concentration range of creatinine in the exhaled breath of 50 volunteers with chronic kidney disease was from 42 pptv to 924 pptv, and the range of the relative standard deviations was from 9.3% to 19.2%. The method provides high sensitivity, high specificity and high speed for semi-quantitative analysis of creatinine in exhaled human breath.
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