Determination of 3-MCPD and Glycidol in Foodstuff
Presentations | | SIMInstrumentation
The determination of 3-MCPD and glycidol in foodstuffs is critical because these contaminants form during oil refining and heating and present health risks above established tolerable daily intakes. Rapid and reliable analysis ensures product safety and reduces costly delays in food processing and shipping.
This work presents the automation of sample preparation for both ester-bound and free 3-MCPD and glycidol according to DGF C-VI 18(10) / AOCS Cd 29c-13. The goal is to increase throughput, repeatability, and instrument longevity while maintaining compliance with official methods.
Automated workflows are implemented on a PAL3 DHR RSI/RTC platform with dual-head capability for overlapping sequences. Key steps include oil extraction with hexane/iso-octane, salt-induced ester cleavage, derivatization with phenylboronic acid, and headspace evaporation. Detection is performed on an Agilent 7890 GC coupled to single-quadrupole or triple-quadrupole MS. Optional backflush and cleaning modules reduce carryover and extend ion source life.
PAL3 DHR RSI/RTC autosampler with integrated dilutor, centrifuge, agitator, vortex mixer, MHE module, solvent modules, and cold stack. Agilent 7890 GC with SQ/TQ MS and CHRONOS scheduling software.
Continued optimization of cleaning protocols and reagent usage will further extend instrument uptime and sensitivity. Integration with laboratory information management systems and expansion to other process contaminants will broaden applicability. Advances in micro-extraction and advanced MS detectors may push detection limits lower and shorten analysis times.
The automated PAL3-based workflow for 3-MCPD and glycidol determination streamlines sample preparation and GC-MS analysis, offering robust, high-throughput, and compliant testing for food safety laboratories. This approach minimizes downtime, ensures data quality, and adapts to evolving regulatory and industrial needs.
EFSA 2017 Tolerable Daily Intake for 3-MCPD
GC/MSD, Sample Preparation, GC/SQ
IndustriesManufacturerAgilent Technologies, Axel Semrau, CTC Analytics
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The determination of 3-MCPD and glycidol in foodstuffs is critical because these contaminants form during oil refining and heating and present health risks above established tolerable daily intakes. Rapid and reliable analysis ensures product safety and reduces costly delays in food processing and shipping.
Objectives and Study Overview
This work presents the automation of sample preparation for both ester-bound and free 3-MCPD and glycidol according to DGF C-VI 18(10) / AOCS Cd 29c-13. The goal is to increase throughput, repeatability, and instrument longevity while maintaining compliance with official methods.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Automated workflows are implemented on a PAL3 DHR RSI/RTC platform with dual-head capability for overlapping sequences. Key steps include oil extraction with hexane/iso-octane, salt-induced ester cleavage, derivatization with phenylboronic acid, and headspace evaporation. Detection is performed on an Agilent 7890 GC coupled to single-quadrupole or triple-quadrupole MS. Optional backflush and cleaning modules reduce carryover and extend ion source life.
Used Instrumentation
PAL3 DHR RSI/RTC autosampler with integrated dilutor, centrifuge, agitator, vortex mixer, MHE module, solvent modules, and cold stack. Agilent 7890 GC with SQ/TQ MS and CHRONOS scheduling software.
Main Results and Discussion
- Sensitivity: Detection limits for 3-MCPD reach 0.05 mg/kg with background around 0.02 mg/kg; reducing internal standard further can improve sensitivity.
- Reproducibility and Recovery: Calibration curves linear from 0.05 to 5 mg/kg (R² > 0.9996), variation < 1.8%, interday reproducibility < 9%, recoveries 92–133%.
- Carryover: No detectable carryover after high-concentration standards; dual-head rinsing and backflush maintain sample integrity.
- Throughput: CHRONOS scheduling enables 36 samples for both assays in 24 hours with minimal user intervention.
- Comparative Performance: Automated DGF Fast&Clean matches manual protocols in accuracy and precision across diverse oil and food matrices.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High sample throughput supports rapid decision-making in shipping and quality control.
- Automated calibration and recovery monitoring reduce manual workload.
- Modular instrument design allows adaptation to different matrices and analytes.
- Continuous operation mode ensures sustained performance over days.
Future Trends and Applications
Continued optimization of cleaning protocols and reagent usage will further extend instrument uptime and sensitivity. Integration with laboratory information management systems and expansion to other process contaminants will broaden applicability. Advances in micro-extraction and advanced MS detectors may push detection limits lower and shorten analysis times.
Conclusion
The automated PAL3-based workflow for 3-MCPD and glycidol determination streamlines sample preparation and GC-MS analysis, offering robust, high-throughput, and compliant testing for food safety laboratories. This approach minimizes downtime, ensures data quality, and adapts to evolving regulatory and industrial needs.
Reference
EFSA 2017 Tolerable Daily Intake for 3-MCPD
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