Analyzing PBDEs in House Dust Samples with the Thermo Scientific TSQ Quantum XLS Ultra GC-MS/MS in EI-SRM Mode
Applications | 2012 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are widely used flame retardants that persist in indoor environments, accumulate in house dust, and pose potential health risks. Their tendency to thermally degrade and their low environmental concentrations necessitate highly sensitive and selective analytical techniques.
This study evaluates an electron impact selected reaction monitoring (EI-SRM) method on a triple quadrupole GC-MS/MS system (Thermo Scientific TSQ Quantum XLS Ultra) for quantifying PBDE congeners from BDE28 to BDE209 in house dust. A parallel comparison with negative chemical ionization (NCI) highlights performance differences in sensitivity and selectivity.
Sample preparation involves pressurized liquid extraction using a Dionex ASE 350 with dichloromethane at elevated temperature and pressure, combined with in-cell silica cleanup to remove polar contaminants. Extracts are concentrated under nitrogen to a final volume of 150 µL. GC-MS/MS analysis employs a programmable temperature vaporization (PTV) injector and a short, thin-film TraceGOLD TG-5HT column (15 m × 0.25 mm, 0.1 µm film). Key parameters include:
The combination of accelerated solvent extraction with in-cell cleanup, PTV injection, and high-resolution EI-SRM on a triple quadrupole GC-MS/MS system delivers a robust, sensitive, and selective method for PBDE analysis in house dust. EI-SRM outperforms NCI in selectivity, enabling precise measurements at low ppb levels that are critical for exposure assessment and regulatory compliance.
GC/MSD, GC/MS/MS, GC/QQQ
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are widely used flame retardants that persist in indoor environments, accumulate in house dust, and pose potential health risks. Their tendency to thermally degrade and their low environmental concentrations necessitate highly sensitive and selective analytical techniques.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates an electron impact selected reaction monitoring (EI-SRM) method on a triple quadrupole GC-MS/MS system (Thermo Scientific TSQ Quantum XLS Ultra) for quantifying PBDE congeners from BDE28 to BDE209 in house dust. A parallel comparison with negative chemical ionization (NCI) highlights performance differences in sensitivity and selectivity.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample preparation involves pressurized liquid extraction using a Dionex ASE 350 with dichloromethane at elevated temperature and pressure, combined with in-cell silica cleanup to remove polar contaminants. Extracts are concentrated under nitrogen to a final volume of 150 µL. GC-MS/MS analysis employs a programmable temperature vaporization (PTV) injector and a short, thin-film TraceGOLD TG-5HT column (15 m × 0.25 mm, 0.1 µm film). Key parameters include:
- 2 µL splitless injection; PTV program from 80 °C to 300 °C
- Oven ramp: 120 °C (1 min) → 320 °C at 20 °C/min, hold 5 min
- EI mode: 70 eV, 0.15 Da resolution in Q1 and Q3
- NCI mode: reagent gas SIM monitoring at m/z 79 and 81
Main Results and Discussion
- Linear calibration achieved in EI-SRM down to sub-µg/L; BDE209 required higher standard levels to compensate for lower response.
- Method detection limits (3× standard deviation) in dust ranged from <0.06 µg/kg (BDE28) to 4.5 µg/kg (BDE209).
- Repeatability tests yielded area RSDs below 6% and ion ratio deviations under 11% across target congeners.
- EI-SRM provided clear, interference-free peaks in house dust, while NCI-SIM exhibited broader interferences despite higher sensitivity.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High selectivity of EI-SRM at narrow mass resolution ensures reliable quantification in complex matrices.
- PTV injection with a thin-film column minimizes thermal degradation of high-brominated congeners such as BDE209.
- Pressurized liquid extraction with in-cell cleanup accelerates throughput and reduces sample handling.
- External calibration meets regulatory criteria for monitoring PBDEs in environmental and indoor matrices.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Incorporation of isotopically labeled internal standards to improve quantitation and recovery assessment.
- Extension of SRM protocols to other brominated or emerging flame retardants.
- Automation of extraction and injection workflows for high-throughput laboratories.
- Development of portable GC-MS/MS platforms for on-site indoor air and dust monitoring.
Conclusion
The combination of accelerated solvent extraction with in-cell cleanup, PTV injection, and high-resolution EI-SRM on a triple quadrupole GC-MS/MS system delivers a robust, sensitive, and selective method for PBDE analysis in house dust. EI-SRM outperforms NCI in selectivity, enabling precise measurements at low ppb levels that are critical for exposure assessment and regulatory compliance.
Reference
- Cox P.; Efthymiou P. Directive 2003/11/EC on pentabromodiphenyl ether and octabromodiphenyl ether. Off. J. Eur. Union 2003, L42:45–46.
- Stockholm Convention 2010. Startup Guidance for nine new persistent organic pollutants.
- Korytár P.; Covaci A.; de Boer J.; Gelbind A.; Brinkman U. Retention-time database for 126 PBDE congeners on seven capillary GC columns. J. Chrom. A 2005, 1065:239–249.
- Lagalante A.; Oswald T. Analysis of PBDEs by LC-APPI-MS/MS in house dust. Anal. Bioanal. Chem. 2008, 391:2249–2256.
- Eurachem Guide 1998. The Fitness for Purpose of Analytical Methods: Method Validation and Related Topics.
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