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Featured researches published by Massimo Del Bubba.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2014

QuEChERS sample preparation for the determination of pesticides and other organic residues in environmental matrices: a critical review

Maria Concetta Bruzzoniti; Rosa Maria De Carlo; Serena Orlandini; Luca Rivoira; Massimo Del Bubba

Quick, Easy, Cheap, Effective, Rugged, and Safe (QuEChERS) is an extraction and clean-up technique originally developed for recovering pesticide residues from fruits and vegetables. Since its introduction, and until December 2013, about 700 papers have been published using the QuEChERS technique, according to a literature overview carried out using SciFinder, Elsevier SciVerse, and Google search engines. Most of these papers were dedicated to pesticide multiresidue analysis in food matrices, and this topic has been thoroughly reviewed over recent years. The QuEChERS approach is now rapidly developing beyond its original field of application to analytes other than pesticides, and matrices other than food, such as biological fluids and non-edible plants, including Chinese medicinal plants. Recently, the QuEChERS concept has spread to environmental applications by analyzing not only pesticides but also other compounds of environmental concern in soil, sediments, and water. To the best of our knowledge, QuEChERS environmental applications have not been reviewed so far; therefore, in this contribution, after a general discussion on the evolution and changes of the original QuEChERS method, a critical survey of the literature regarding environmental applications of conventional and modified QuEChERS methodology is provided. The overall recoveries obtained with QuEChERS and other extraction approaches (e.g., accelerated solvent extraction, ultrasonic solvent extraction, liquid/solid extraction, and soxhlet extraction) were compared, providing evidence for QuEChERS higher recoveries for various classes of compounds, such as biopesticides, chloroalkanes, phenols, and perfluoroalkyl substances. The role of physicochemical properties of soil (i.e., clay and organic carbon content, as well as cation exchange capacity) and target analytes (i.e., log KOW, water solubility, and vapor pressure) were also evaluated in order to interpret recovery and matrix effect data.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Polyphenol levels and free radical scavenging activities of four apple cultivars from integrated and organic farming in different italian areas.

Lavinia Lamperi; Ugo Chiuminatto; Alessandra Cincinelli; Galvan P; Edgardo Giordani; L. Lepri; Massimo Del Bubba

This paper investigates the influence of cultivar (Annurca, Golden Delicious, Red Chief, and Stayman Neepling), rural practice (integrated and organic), and growing region (different Italian regions) on polyphenol composition and antiradical activity of the pulp and skin of apples, as presented to the consumer at the market. Antiradical activity of fruit was strongly related with the total polyphenolic content, determined both by the spectrophotometric Folin-Ciocalteu method ( R (2) = 0.90; P < 0.01) and by HPLC ( R (2) = 0.85; P < 0.01). Considering the edible portion of the fruit, polyphenolics contribute toward explaining approximately 90% of the overall antiradical activity, thus highlighting their important role in human health protection. Therefore, the data indirectly indicated that ascorbic acid and other antiradical molecules differing from polyphenols play a much less important role in explaining the health-protecting properties of apples. Cultivar effect was by far the most important, and Annurca and Golden Delicious were respectively the best and the worst apples from the point of view of the health-protecting attributes.


Environmental Pollution | 2012

The use of levoglucosan for tracing biomass burning in PM2.5 samples in Tuscany (Italy)

M. Giannoni; Tania Martellini; Massimo Del Bubba; Andrea Gambaro; Roberta Zangrando; M. Chiari; L. Lepri; Alessandra Cincinelli

Levoglucosan was present in all samples and its concentrations showed a pronounced annual cycle with maximum levels in the cold season. The annual percentage of ratios of levoglucosan to OC ranged from 0.04 to 9.75% evidencing a major contribution of biomass burning to the aerosol OC during the winter. In the urban-background site, OC was strongly correlated with EC in winter, suggesting that the major fraction of OC was generated as primary particles along with EC. A background levoglucosan component showed that biomass burning was continuously taking place in all the investigated sites. The biomass burning contribution to the Tuscany aerosol was made up of a background component and an additional component during winter probably due to wood burning for domestic heating.


Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2012

Liquid chromatographic/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric study of polyphenolic composition of four cultivars of Fragaria vesca L. berries and their comparative evaluation†

Massimo Del Bubba; Ugo Chiuminatto; Saer Doumett; Donatella Fibbi; Edgardo Giordani

High-performance liquid chromatography coupled with ion spray mass spectrometry in the tandem mode with both negative and positive ionization was used for investigating a variety of polyphenolic compounds in four genotypes of Fragaria vesca berries. About 60 phenolic compounds belonging to the compound classes of phenolic acids, ellagitannins, ellagic acid derivatives, flavonols, monomeric and oligomeric flavanols, dihydrochalcones and anthocyanins were reported, providing for the first time a quite complete picture of polyphenolic composition of F. vesca berries. Some of the polyphenols herein investigated, such as a tris-galloyl-hexahydroxydiphenoyl-hexose, two castalagin/vescalagin-like isomers and peonidin-malonylglucoside, were described for the first time. Principal component analysis applied on original HPLC-MS/MS data, acquired in multiple reaction monitoring mode, successfully discriminated the four investigated cultivars on the basis of their polyphenolic composition, highlighting the fundamental role of mass spectrometry for food characterization.


Environmental Pollution | 2009

Organochlorine pesticide air-water exchange and bioconcentration in krill in the Ross Sea.

Alessandra Cincinelli; Tania Martellini; Massimo Del Bubba; L. Lepri; Simonetta Corsolini; Nicoletta Borghesi; Martin D. King; Rebecca M. Dickhut

Mean hexachlorobenzene (HCB) and hexachlorocyclohexane (HCH) concentrations, measured in seawater and air samples, confirmed the decline in levels of these compounds in Antarctic air and water. However, low alpha/gamma-HCH ratios in air at the beginning of the sampling period suggest a predominance of fresh lindane entering the Antarctic atmosphere during the Austral spring probably due to current use in the Southern Hemisphere. Water-air fugacity ratios demonstrate the potential for HCH gas deposition to coastal Antarctic seas, while the water-air fugacity ratios for HCB imply that volatilization does not account for the observed decrease of HCB in surface seawater. HCH concentrations found in krill samples were correlated with seawater concentrations indicative of bioconcentration of HCHs from seawater.


Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 1997

Effect of pasteurization and storage on some components of pooled human milk

L. Lepri; Massimo Del Bubba; Rita Maggini; Gianpaolo Donzelli; Galvan P

Pooled human milk was subjected to Holder pasteurization and storage at -20 degrees C up to 90 days and examined for its content of fat and L-lactate and for lipid composition. This treatment reduced fats by 6% and L-lactate by at least 7%. In addition, pasteurization and storage induced triglyceride hydrolysis. The absolute amount of free fatty acids (FFAs) which was 0.5% after collection, doubled after pasteurization and rose even more after storage. Different FFA compositions were found by several authors using the same analytical method even for milk samples subjected to the same treatment. More detailed information on procedures must be given to explain the different results.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2012

Distribution and mass balance of hexavalent and trivalent chromium in a subsurface, horizontal flow (SF-h) constructed wetland operating as post-treatment of textile wastewater for water reuse.

Donatella Fibbi; Saer Doumett; L. Lepri; Cristina Gonnelli; Ester Coppini; Massimo Del Bubba

In this study, during a two-year period, we investigated the fate of hexavalent and trivalent chromium in a full-scale subsurface horizontal flow constructed wetland planted with Phragmites australis. The reed bed operated as post-treatment of the effluent wastewater from an activated sludge plant serving the textile industrial district and the city of Prato (Italy). Chromium speciation was performed in influent and effluent wastewater and in water-suspended solids, at different depths and distances from the inlet; plants were also analyzed for total chromium along the same longitudinal profile. Removals of hexavalent and trivalent chromium equal to 72% and 26%, respectively were achieved. The mean hexavalent chromium outlet concentration was 1.6 ± 0.9 μg l(-1) and complied with the Italian legal limits for water reuse. Chromium in water-suspended solids was in the trivalent form, thus indicating that its removal from wastewater was obtained by the reduction of hexavalent chromium to the trivalent form, followed by accumulation of the latter inside the reed bed. Chromium in water-suspended solids was significantly affected by the distance from the inlet. Chromium concentrations in the different plant organs followed the same trend of suspended solids along the longitudinal profile and were much lower than those found in the solid material, evidencing a low metal accumulation in P. australis.


International Journal of Environmental Analytical Chemistry | 1998

Analysis of organic compounds in Antarctic snow and their origin

Pier Giorgio Desideri; L. Lepri; Roberto Udisti; Massimo Del Bubba; Renato Cini; Angela Maria Stortini

Organic compounds extractable with n-hexane were identified and quantitatively determined in pack, surface and deep snow samples taken at different depths and collected at several altitudes above sea level from Antarctica during the 1993/94 Italian expedition. The comparison between the composition of organic compounds in snow and the ones in pack and sea-water samples pointed out that the three matrices substantially contain the same biogenic and anthropogenic organic compounds. The contribution of marine aerosol to organic content in the snow is confirmed by the enrichment ratios calculated for the more representative classes of identified compounds (n-alkanes, phthalates and low molecular weight alkylbenzenes). The changes in the composition of organic compounds in snow as the altitude increases seem to depend on the dimensional spectrum of the aerosol. Thus, smallest particles, richest in surfactant material, reach the highest altitudes.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2013

Thin-layer chromatography enantioseparations on chiral stationary phases: a review

Massimo Del Bubba; L. Lepri

The current state of chiral separations by thin-layer chromatography using chiral stationary phases is reviewed. Both stationary phases essentially constituted by the chiral selector and those obtained by the impregnation of achiral plates with appropriate chiral selectors are described. Particular attention is paid to commercial and non-commercial cellulose and cellulose-derivative plates, as well as commercially available Chiralplate™, which are currently the most widely used. Some of the most important results obtained to date are reported and discussed; the examples provided illustrate the very wide range of structurally different solutes that can be readily resolved into their enantiomers by planar chromatographic methods. Special attention is paid to the discussion of the retention and resolution factors that influence chiral discrimination. The quantitative analysis of enantiomers is also discussed, especially from the point of view of determination of enantiomeric purity.


Journal of Chromatography A | 2016

Determination of androgens and progestogens in environmental and biological samples using fabric phase sorptive extraction coupled to ultra-high performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry

Rayco Guedes-Alonso; Lorenzo Ciofi; Zoraida Sosa-Ferrera; José Juan Santana-Rodríguez; Massimo Del Bubba; Abuzar Kabir; Kenneth G. Furton

Androgens and progestogens are two important groups of endocrine disrupting compounds (EDCs) which are implicated to produce severe detrimental impact over aquatic biota, even at very low concentrations of ngL(-1). For this reason, one of the major challenges to analytical chemists is the development of sensitive and selective extraction processes which allow the rapid and green determination of these emerging pollutants at low concentrations in environmental samples. Fabric phase sorptive extraction is a new, highly sensitive, efficient and solvent minimized technique which combine the advantages of sol-gel derived microextraction sorbents and the rich surface chemistry of cellulose fabric substrate. This process has several advantages such as minimum usage of organic solvents, short extraction times, small sample volumes and high analyte preconcentration factors. In this study, an extraction method based on sorptive fabric phase coupled to ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry detection (FPSE-UHPLC-MS/MS) has been developed for the determination of four progestogens and six androgens in environmental and biological samples. All the parameters involved in the extraction, such as sample volume, extraction and desorption times, desorption solvent volume and sample pH values have been optimized. The developed method provides satisfactory limits of detection (between 1.7 and 264ngL(-1)), good recoveries and low relative standard deviations (below 10% in tap and osmosis water and below 20% in wastewater and urine). Subsequently, the method was used to analyse tap water, wastewater treated with different processing technologies and urine samples. The concentrations of the detected hormones ranged from 28.3 to 227.3 ngL(-1) in water samples and from 1.1 to 3.7μgL(-1) in urine samples.

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L. Lepri

University of Florence

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