The binding affinity of pharmaceutical hydrochlorides onto transition metal oxide nanoparticles (TMONPs) was investigated through a consecutive process of adsorption and desorption. Mexiletine (MEX) was chosen as a model pharmaceutical hydrochloride that bound onto TMONPs' surface through electrostatic interactions and coordination bonding. Response surface methodology was applied for their optimal separation by capillary electrophoresis to achieve accurate quantitation. Linear and quadratic regressions were applied to model peak resolution and migration times. The response surface methodology was next applied to investigate the maximum desorption percentages of mexiletine (MEX) from the surface of TiO and CoO nanoparticles. ANOVA indicated a positive correlation between the MEX desorption results with pH, metformin (MET) competitive desorption agent concentration, NaHPO concentration (hence ionic strength), and NaSO reducing agent concentration. The MEX desorption increased from TiO (46 ± 1%) to CoO (63 ± 1%), suggesting a stronger binding interaction between MEX and TiO nanoparticles. TiO exhibited the order of pH > [MET] > [NaHPO] > [NaSO]; CoO exhibited the order [NaHPO] > pH > [MET] > [NaSO]. This novel finding demonstrates the potential of TMONPs for use as efficient adsorbents to remove pharmaceutical compounds that accidently enter environmental water sources, with feasible regeneration.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11656192PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4ra07081jDOI Listing

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