José Dugay
École Normale Supérieure
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Featured researches published by José Dugay.
Journal of Chromatography A | 1998
José Dugay; Cécile Miège; Marie-Claire Hennion
The parameters governing solid-phase microextraction (SPME) are investigated, with emphasis on the determination of the partition coefficients, K, and their use to predict the selection of a fibre, depending on the respective characteristics of the fibres and the analytes. Film thickness and stability of the compounds can interfere with the determination of K values. The time profile curves were determined for twelve pesticides having a wide range of water solubilities and polarities and using four fibres (polydimethylsiloxane, polydimethylsiloxane-divinylbenzene, Carbowax-divinylbenzene and polyacrylate). Although the affinity order was different for the four coatings, no correlation was found between the respective characteristics of the fibres and solutes. The two fibres containing divinylbenzene were shown to have the highest affinities and the polydimethylsiloxane had the lowest affinity. The polyacrylate fibre which is the more polar commercial fibre did not provide the highest affinities for the more polar and water-soluble analytes. The important parameters for quantitative analysis have been evaluated. The calibration curves were similar when one analyte of interest was present on its own in a drinking water sample, or when eleven other pesticides were present at the same concentration or when much higher concentrations of other analytes were present in the sample. Linearity was obtained over a wide range of concentrations in drinking water samples. Detection limits are in agreement with European regulatory levels in drinking water for most of the analytes using solid-phase microextraction-gas chromatography-nitrogen-phosphorus detection (SPME-GC-NPD). In contaminated surface water samples, the chromatograms are relatively clean and most of the compounds can be detected at levels lower than 0.5 microgram/l.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2003
Cécile Miège; José Dugay; Marie-Claire Hennion
There is a need for a better characterization of sludges from wastewater treatment plants which are destined to be spread on agricultural lands. Inorganic pollutants are regularly controlled but organic pollutants have received few attention up to now. On this paper, we have been interested on the analysis of the 16 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) listed in the US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) priority list and more particularly of the six PAHs listed in the European community list (fluoranthene, benzo[b and k]fluoranthene, benzo[a]pyrene, benzo[ghi]perylene, indeno[1,2,3-cd]pyrene). The analysis step consists on liquid chromatography with both fluorescence and UV detections as described in the EPA Method 8310. As for the extraction step, several techniques such as supercritical fluid extraction, pressurized liquid extraction, focused microwave extraction in open vessels, Soxhlet and ultrasonic extractions are compared after optimization of the experimental conditions (solvent nature and quantity, temperature, pressure, duration, ... ) and validation with certified sludges. When optimized, these five extraction techniques are as much efficient with similar relative standard deviation. Whatever the extraction techniques used, the whole analysis protocol permits to quantify PAHs in the range of 0.09 to 0.9 mg/kg of dried sludges.
Journal of Chromatography A | 1998
Cécile Miège; José Dugay; Marie-Claire Hennion
There is a need for a better characterization of sludges from wastewater treatment plants which are destined to be spread on agricultural land. Inorganic pollutants are regularly controlled, but organic pollutants have received little attention up to now. The main problem for trace analysis of organic pollutants comes from the complexity of the various matrices of sludges, which depends on their origins. Therefore, methods described for soils and sediments cannot be directly applied to sludges which contain high amount of lipids. This paper provides a method for trace-determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in the range of mg/kg of dried sludge including an extraction step, and an analysis step by liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection for sensitive quantification and UV-diode-array detection for confirmation. The extraction step was optimized by a selection of the solvent used for both Soxhlet and supercritical-fluid extraction and by setting the experimental conditions (temperature, pressure, modifier, etc.) used for SFE. Extraction recoveries were found similar and quantitative for the two procedures. However supercritical-fluid extraction appears to be a good alternative to Soxhlet extraction because of the consumption of less time and solvent. Detection limits were obtained in the range of 0.1-1 mg/kg of dried sludges, with possible confirmation by UV spectra. The whole method (extraction/quantification/confirmation) was validated using sludges which have been certified by the Community Bureau of Reference from Brussels (CRM No. 088). Application to the determination of PAHs in urban sludges is presented.
Journal of Chromatography A | 1999
Cécile Miège; M. Bouzige; S. Nicol; José Dugay; Valérie Pichon; Marie-Claire Hennion
A selective clean-up procedure using immunoaffinity solid-phase extraction was applied for the trace-level determination of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in urban waste water and sewage sludges used for soil amendment. Anti-pyrene antibodies have been immobilized on a silica-based sorbent and the cross-reactivity of the antibodies towards structurally related compounds were allowed to extract the whole class of priority PAHs. The selectivity of the antibodies provided clean extracts from sludges and, therefore, the identification and quantification were shown to be easier using either liquid chromatography (LC) with UV diode array and fluorescence detection in series or gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), although some loss of up to 50% was observed for the clean-up. The identification of the PAHs by matching of UV and MS spectra was greatly improved. The procedure, including immunoclean-up and LC coupled to diode array and fluorescence detection, was validated using certified reference materials with native PAHs of concentrations in the range of 0.57-2.16 mg/kg (dry sludges).
Journal of Chromatography A | 2003
Laure Malleret; José Dugay; Auguste Bruchet; Marie-Claire Hennion
Certain haloanisoles present at trace levels cause a large part of earthy-musty off-flavor problems in drinking water. These potent odorous chemicals come mainly through biomethylation of their corresponding halopenols. To enable the investigation of both families of compounds, a method involving solid-phase microextraction (SPME) was developed and the main parameters governing SPME were optimized. This method allows the simultaneous quantification of haloanisoles and halophenols at levels ranging from 1 to 100 or 250 ng/l, with detection limits of about 0.5 ng/l and could be applied to potable as well as raw surface waters.
Journal of Chromatography A | 2003
Stéphanie Legrand; José Dugay; Jérôme Vial
The aim of this work was to prove that solid-phase microextraction coupled with gas chromatography could be used for the determination and quantification of residual solvents in drugs. Four solvents were selected for the experiments: ethanol, cyclohexane, triethylamine and pyridine, together with a model powdered drug substance. Several kinds of fibers, together with the extraction mode, were evaluated to determine the most appropriate one for the simultaneous extraction of the four solvents. The most promising conditions were obtained with the Carboxen-polydimethylsiloxane fiber in the headspace of the aqueous solution that contained the dissolved powder. A concentrated phosphate buffer was added to the aqueous solution to set the pH at 9.6 in order to enable good extraction of triethylamine, and the optimum extraction time was experimentally determined. A multi-criteria optimization was also carried out by means of design of experiments to optimize remaining parameters: the extraction temperature was set at 40 degrees C, the ionic strength at 1.77 mol (l-1) and the volume of the aqueous solution at 7.2 ml. The method of standard additions was used for quantitative analysis. Its performance was evaluated and validated: the pooled RSD was around 15%, the limits of detection were all of the ppb level and the method was both accurate and linear.
Chromatographia | 2001
S. Nicol; José Dugay; Marie-Claire Hennion
SummaryO-PAHs have been analyzed in extracts of particulate matter by GC-MS-MS and GC-MS. Using GC-MS, most O-PAHs could not be detected in raw extracts, or their confirmation was uncertain due to interfering compounds from the matrix. Detection and quantification was greatly improved by using GC-MS-MS. Linearity was observed in the range from 10 to 1000 pg injected. Low traces of O-PAHs, in the range of a few pg·m−3 of air, could be detected without purification or fractionation of the extract.
Journal of Separation Science | 2001
Sophie Nicol; José Dugay; Marie-Claire Hennion
PAHs and their nitrated derivatives (Nitro-PAHs) have been analyzed in extracts from particulate matter by GC-MS and GC-MS-MS. Using GC-MS, most of these compounds could not be detected in raw extracts or their confirmation was uncertain because of interfering compounds from the matrix. Detection and quantification was greatly improved by using GC-MS-MS. Limits of detection were lower than 40 pg (injected) in standard solution and in diesel particulate matter extracts (for 10 mg of particles extracted). Low traces of PAHs and Nitro-PAHs, in the range of a few pg m -3 , could be detected without purification or fractionation of the extract.
Oncology | 2018
Aurélie Thuleau; Caroline Gilbert; Pierre Bauër; S. Alran; Virginie Fourchotte; Eugénie Guillot; Anne Vincent-Salomon; Jean-Charles Kerihuel; José Dugay; Vincent Semetey; Irène Kriegel; Isabelle Fromantin
We developed a new transcutaneous method for breast cancer detection with dogs: 2 dogs were trained to sniff skin secretion samples on compresses that had been worn overnight by women on their breast, and to recognize a breast cancer sample among 4 samples. During the test, the dogs recognized 90.3% of skin secretion breast cancer samples. This proof-of-concept study opens new avenues for the development of a reliable cancer diagnostic tool integrating olfactory abilities of dogs.
Revue Francophone de Cicatrisation | 2017
Aurélie Thuleau; José Dugay; Vincent Semetey; Isabelle Fromantin