Simultaneous Testing of Multiclass Organic Contaminants in 4 Food and Environment by Liquid Chromatography/ Dielectric 5 Barrier Discharge Ionization- Mass Spectrometry
Fecha
2012
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RSC
Resumen
A Dielectric Barrier Discharge Ionization (DBDI) LC/MS interface is based on the use of a lowtemperature
helium plasma, which features the possibility of simultaneous ionization of species with a
wide variety of physicochemical properties. In this work, the performance of LC/DBDI-MS for trace
analysis of highly relevant species in food and environment has been examined. Over 75 relevant species
including multiclass priority organic contaminants and residues such as pesticides, polycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons, organochlorine species, pharmaceuticals, personal care products, and drugs of abuse
were tested. LC/DBDI-MS performance for this application was assessed and compared with standard
LC/MS sources (electrospray ionization (ESI) and atmospheric pressure chemical ionization (APCI)).
The used benchtop Orbitrap mass spectrometer features a 10 Hz polarity switching mode, so that both
positive and negative ion mode acquisitions are possible with acquisition cycles matching the
requirements of fast liquid chromatography. Both polar and nonpolar species (including those typically
analyzed by GC/electron ionization-MS) can be tested in a single run using polarity switching mode.
The methodology was found to be effective in detecting a wide array of organic compounds at
concentration levels in the low ng L-1 to mg kg-1 range in wastewater and food matrices, respectively.
The linearity was evaluated in an olive oil extract, obtaining good correlation coefficients in the studied
range. Additionally, minor matrix effects (<=15% of signal suppression or enhancement) were observed
for most of the studied analytes in this complex fatty matrix. The results obtained were compared with
data from both ESI and APCI sources, obtaining a merged coverage between ESI and APCI in terms of
analyte ionization and higher overall sensitivity for the proposed ion source based on the DBD
principle. The use of this approach further extends the coverage of current LC/MS methods towards an
even larger variety of chemical species including both polar and nonpolar (non-ESI amenable) species
and may find several applications in fields such as food and environment testing or metabolomics where
GC/MS and LC/MS are combined to cover as many different species as possible.
Descripción
Palabras clave
dielectric barrier discharge, atmospheric pressure ionization, mass spectrometry, liquid chromatography, pesticide, environmental, food
Citación
Analyst 2012;137:5403-5410