Aniline is an anthropogenic organic compound widely used in polymer, rubber, pharmaceutical and dye industries but also used in biodegradability assays of chemical compounds as a positive biodegradation standard. By the two approaches, the rapid determination of aniline is necessary because of the high toxicity of aniline on hemoglobin. A high-performance liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC/MS/MS) method for the determination of aniline in water is described here. This method, using benzylamine as internal standard, was validated. No time-consuming sample preparation was needed. A rapid separation (7 min between two chromatographic runs) of aniline and benzylamine was performed on a Hypercarb porous graphitic carbon column using a gradient of methanol and 100 mM formic acid. The obtained limits of detection and quantification were 10 and 1 ng/mL, respectively. The response for aniline was quadratic. We show that this problem could be circumvented by showing that the [calculated concentration = f(introduced concentration)] function was linear. The linearity range was 10-1000 ng/mL. An example of an application consisting of an aniline 42-day degradation kinetic in water was demonstrated.
Copyright 2004 John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.