Microemulsification: An Approach for Analytical Determinations
Renato S. Lima, Leandro Y. Shiroma, Alvaro V. N. C. Teixeira, Jos\'e, R. de Toledo, Bruno C. do Couto, Rog\'erio M. de Carvalho, Emanuel Carrilho,, Lauro T. Kubota, Angelo L. Gobbi

TL;DR
This paper introduces a microemulsification-based analytical method that is simple, rapid, and environmentally friendly, capable of accurately determining analytes like water in ethanol fuels and monoethylene glycol in complex natural gas samples.
Contribution
It presents a novel microemulsification approach that leverages thermodynamic stabilization effects for analytical determinations, eliminating the need for extraction or preconcentration steps.
Findings
Broad linear range for water in ethanol up to 70%
Accurate detection of monoethylene glycol in complex samples
Method shows high robustness against preparation and temperature variations
Abstract
We address a novel method for analytical determinations that combines simplicity, rapidity, low consumption of chemicals, and portability with high analytical performance taking into account parameters such as precision, linearity, robustness, and accuracy. This approach relies on the effect of the analyte content over the Gibbs free energy of dispersions, affecting the thermodynamic stabilization of emulsions or Winsor systems to form microemulsions (MEs). Such phenomenon was expressed by the minimum volume fraction of amphiphile required to form microemulsion, which was the analytical signal of the method. The performed studies were: phase behavior, droplet dimension by dynamic light scattering, analytical curve, and robustness tests. The reliability of the method was evaluated by determining water in ethanol fuels and monoethylene glycol in complex samples of liquefied natural gas.…
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