We have investigated the extraction efficiency of a pressurized fluid extraction system using an Ottawa sand matrix, soils and a certified reference material (HS-6) spiked with the 16 polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAHs) associated with method EPA 8100. Acceptable recoveries were achieved for all PAHs using a nominal sand concentration of 2.0 mu g.g(-1). However, similar experiments that were conducted at a concentration of 0.20 mu g.g(-1) afforded poor recoveries and poor reproducibility for the six-ring PAHs indeno(1,2,3-cd)pyrene, dibenz(a)anthracene, and benzo(ghi)perylene. These were not adequately addressed by the use of indeno(1,2,3-cd)pyrene-d12 and benzo(g,h,i)perylene-d12 surrogates. Silanization of vessels using dichlorodimethylsilane adequately passivates the system but is only required for the high surface area retention frits. Replicate analyses at concentrations of 200 and 20 ng.g(-1) demonstrated that detection limits in the low ppb range (ng.g(-1)) are achieved for Ottawa sand, dry soil and soil with moisture contents up to a mass fraction of 30 %. Such performance is consistent with the analytical requirements of the Canadian Sediment Quality Guidelines. Improved analyte recoveries were also observed for the certified reference material HS-6 which were further improved by increasing extraction temperatures from 100 to 150 A degrees C.