I have been asked to develop and validate a method to determine the mineral oil content of a water in oil emlsion. The GC method I developed posses all of the normal attributes of a sound analytical method (linear, precise, accurate, good recovery, robust, repeatable, etc.) but due to the nature of the required sample prep the number of samples that can be run per day is limited. This set me to look for a faster, easier method to determine the oil content.
The method I am focused on right now is a density based method that uses a densitometer to measure the density of the emulsion, and the known densities of the oil and water to determine the oil content. I believe I am on the right track, but I need some help. Here is the logic behind my assay.
First, assume no volume change upon emulsification (I believe there is, but can't prove it as yet)
Second, assume that we weigh 1 ml of the emulsion.
Then:
Let X= volume (in mL) of water
Assume the volume total is 1 mL, and that we use the weight of that 1 ml
Then 1-x= volume of oil
If we know the densities of each component, then:
d1(vol1) + d2(v2)=weight of 1 mL(y) since
g/mL(mL) + g/mL(mL)=gms
Solving for x:
x=(y-d2)/(d1-d2)
I believe that this give a result that would indicate teh volume percent water in the emulsion, which can then be used to determine the volume percent oil (which is what I want to measure). Is this correct?
Next, is it possible to move directly to density alone to determine the composition? Is so, how would this be expressed? As volume percent, mole percent or weigh percent? I could see using the same equation, except that teh value of x would be teh fractions precentage of water, and 1-x the fractional percentage of oil. But I don't see what the units would be, and since the target oil content (lable claim) is expressed as volume percent, I need to ensure that my results carry the same units.
Can anyone help with this?