Publications by authors named "Stephen F Donovan"

Lewisite (2-chlorovinyldichloroarsine) is a chemical warfare agent developed during World War I. A quantitative method using solid phase extraction (SPE) followed by dual column liquid chromatography (LC)-isotope dilution tandem mass spectrometry (MS-MS) was developed for the determination of (2-chlorovinyl)arsonic acid (CVAOA), a metabolite of Lewisite, in human urine. The sample was treated with hydrogen peroxide to oxidize any (2-chlorovinyl)arsonous acid (CVAA) that remained in the trivalent arsenic oxidation state.

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The knowledge base of factors influencing ion pair partitioning is very sparse, primarily because of the difficulty in determining accurate log P(I) values of desirable low molecular weight (MW) reference compounds. We have developed a potentiometric titration procedure in KCl/water-saturated octanol that provides a link to log P(I) through the thermodynamic cycle of ionization and partitioning. These titrations have the advantage of being independent of the magnitude of log P, while maintaining a reproducibility of a few hundredths of a log P in the calculated difference between log P neutral and log P ion pair (diff (log P(N - I))).

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A simple, quick, versatile and inexpensive HPLC method to estimate the logarithm of the octanol-water partition coefficient (log Pow) employing a methanol-water gradient and a short octadecyl-poly(vinyl alcohol) (ODP) column is described. This method is different from published HPLC-based log Pow methods because it uses retention times from a rapid methanol-water gradient to directly generate log Pow estimates, rather than from a series of isocratic mixtures extrapolated to 100% water. These HPLC log Pow values have good precision and correlate well with traditional shake-flask log Pow values.

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