Solid phase extraction is a powerful technique – it can be used to clean up the most challenging samples, and extract and preconcentrate hundreds of semivolatile organic compounds.
When performing the extraction, the goal is to get the entire sample to run through the extraction disk. But in order to do that, the disk must have the chemical and physical capacity to handle your sample matrix. If your disk becomes overwhelmed or clogs, you risk losing your sample and the chance to complete your extraction.
How do you prevent the disk from clogging? Prefilters!
When preparing your disk holder for an extraction, it’s vital to understand your sample matrix as much as possible. Believe it or not, you can usually investigate this just by looking at your sample. If you invert it and look through the wall of the bottle, what do you observe? Does the sample contain particulates? If so, are they large or small? Are there obvious particles such as pebbles, leaves or sticks? Do the particles settle quickly or do they tend to remain suspended in the matrix?
If your sample seems oily or soapy, you could be at risk for forming an emulsion during extraction. Emulsions aren’t addressed in this post, but they can be challenging to overcome and shouldn’t be ignored. Check out this recent blog post on extracting hexane-extractable materials from olive brines for navigating an extraction for oily samples.
The key to successfully extracting challenging samples is to use multiple types of prefilters. These will work together to separate the sample matrix into a lot of smaller layers reducing the possibility that any single filter gets overwhelmed and clogs. Here’s an approach I find useful:
This layered filter approach comes in handy with samples like wastewaters. The more you can filter your sample prior to extraction, the cleaner and more successful your extraction will be. This application note for processing wastewater samples for oil and grease is a nice example of that.
If you’ve attempted all of the steps mentioned above and are still having trouble processing your samples, you might consider splitting your sample into smaller aliquots and processing them in smaller volumes. This is not a common approach to sample preparation and creates several opportunities for contamination, error or sample loss, so make sure your QC department and auditor are in agreement with you before you attempt this approach.