If you are a chemist that is either a beginner or an expert in extracting per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) there are always going to be questions that come up after the extraction has taken place. Most often, questions occur at the concentration step. Such topics include water bath temperature, extract dryness, evaporation rates, and even water in the extract. How can one or all of the topics impact your analysis and where are good starting points?
One of the most asked questions I get when evaporating PFAS extracts is “how fast can I evaporate”?
This question comes up most often when faced with PFAS workflows as the extraction step can take some time. We think of PFAS as a forever analyte and that it won’t have an issue with high bath temperatures and very high nitrogen flow rates. Well believe it or not you can have lower recoveries of certain PFAS analytes with extreme temperatures and flow rates. I always approach it with this rule of thumb, don’t heat a water bath over 65 degrees Celsius. This is the same direction
The idea is to evaporate the methanol/water mix. With any evaporating instrument this extract combination can take some time. I have conducted this evaporation myself. I was able to concentrate to dryness in 45-50 minutes with extract volumes ranging from 8-10mL with the TurboVap® LV. The water bath temperature combined with the nitrogen vortex that is created is the key for consistency and efficiency with the extracts. I will tell you this you really want to see a vortex in the tube, not too aggressive though as this action will make the extract splatter inside the tube. The vortex action will provide two benefits. One, the nitrogen will cool and keep the more volatile analytes
What I like about the TurboVap® LV is that you can manually change the angles
For more information on concentrating PFAS analytes, workflows and tips please visit PFAS Sample Prep Workflow.