Analysis of Blood Alcohol by Headspace Gas Chromatography with Dual Flame Ionization Detection and AOC-6000 Plus Autosampler
Applications | 2021 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
The accurate determination of blood alcohol content (BAC) plays a pivotal role in forensic toxicology, clinical diagnostics, and legal enforcement. Robust headspace gas chromatography with dual flame ionization detection (GC-FID) offers high specificity and sensitivity for volatile organic compounds, ensuring reliable quantitation in complex biological matrices.
This application note describes a validated headspace GC-FID method using a Shimadzu AOC-6000 Plus autosampler coupled to a Nexis GC-2030 with dual FID-2030 detectors. The main goals were to develop a calibration strategy, demonstrate method precision and accuracy over six concentration levels, and confirm baseline separation of four analytes: methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone.
• Preparation of two primary aqueous stock solutions: one containing acetone and another containing methanol, ethanol, and isopropanol.
• Combination into an intermediate four-component stock, followed by serial dilution to generate six calibrators ranging from 0.002 to 0.051 g/dL for each analyte.
• Preparation of high and low whole-blood controls by spiking negative blood with calibration stocks to achieve ~0.405 g/dL (high) and ~0.051 g/dL (low) levels.
• Sample handling: 100 µL of calibrator or blood sample mixed with 1 mL n-propanol internal standard in a 20 mL headspace vial, then crimped and incubated.
• Autosampler: Shimadzu AOC-6000 Plus with headspace capability (incubation at 60 °C, 5 s pre-purge, 3.5 min analysis).
• Gas Chromatograph: Shimadzu Nexis GC-2030 with split injection (split ratio 9, inlet 220 °C, isothermal oven at 35 °C).
• Columns: Two SH-Rtx-BAC Plus capillaries (30 m × 0.32 mm i.d., df 1.8 µm and 0.6 µm) configured in parallel.
• Detectors: Dual FID-2030 units (250 °C, hydrogen 32 mL/min, air 300 mL/min, nitrogen makeup 8 mL/min).
• Calibration curves for each analyte displayed excellent linearity (r2 ≥ 0.999) with a quadratic fit.
• Chromatograms from both FIDs showed complete baseline separation of methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone within a 3-minute run.
• Method precision and accuracy were consistent across columns of differing film thickness, demonstrating robustness.
• High throughput: 3-minute analysis time supports large sample volumes in forensic and clinical laboratories.
• Dual-column confirmation enhances data reliability and reduces false positives.
• Simple sample preparation with stable aqueous and blood controls ensures reproducible results.
• Integration of mass spectrometric detection for increased specificity.
• Miniaturized or portable headspace modules for point-of-care testing.
• Automated data analysis workflows using AI to streamline result reporting.
The described headspace GC-FID method with dual-column detection and AOC-6000 Plus automation provides a fast, precise, and robust approach for BAC determination. The strong linearity, baseline separation, and reproducibility make it well suited for forensic, clinical, and quality-control settings.
GC, HeadSpace
IndustriesClinical Research
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The accurate determination of blood alcohol content (BAC) plays a pivotal role in forensic toxicology, clinical diagnostics, and legal enforcement. Robust headspace gas chromatography with dual flame ionization detection (GC-FID) offers high specificity and sensitivity for volatile organic compounds, ensuring reliable quantitation in complex biological matrices.
Objectives and Overview of the Study
This application note describes a validated headspace GC-FID method using a Shimadzu AOC-6000 Plus autosampler coupled to a Nexis GC-2030 with dual FID-2030 detectors. The main goals were to develop a calibration strategy, demonstrate method precision and accuracy over six concentration levels, and confirm baseline separation of four analytes: methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone.
Methodology
• Preparation of two primary aqueous stock solutions: one containing acetone and another containing methanol, ethanol, and isopropanol.
• Combination into an intermediate four-component stock, followed by serial dilution to generate six calibrators ranging from 0.002 to 0.051 g/dL for each analyte.
• Preparation of high and low whole-blood controls by spiking negative blood with calibration stocks to achieve ~0.405 g/dL (high) and ~0.051 g/dL (low) levels.
• Sample handling: 100 µL of calibrator or blood sample mixed with 1 mL n-propanol internal standard in a 20 mL headspace vial, then crimped and incubated.
Used Instrumentation
• Autosampler: Shimadzu AOC-6000 Plus with headspace capability (incubation at 60 °C, 5 s pre-purge, 3.5 min analysis).
• Gas Chromatograph: Shimadzu Nexis GC-2030 with split injection (split ratio 9, inlet 220 °C, isothermal oven at 35 °C).
• Columns: Two SH-Rtx-BAC Plus capillaries (30 m × 0.32 mm i.d., df 1.8 µm and 0.6 µm) configured in parallel.
• Detectors: Dual FID-2030 units (250 °C, hydrogen 32 mL/min, air 300 mL/min, nitrogen makeup 8 mL/min).
Main Results and Discussion
• Calibration curves for each analyte displayed excellent linearity (r2 ≥ 0.999) with a quadratic fit.
• Chromatograms from both FIDs showed complete baseline separation of methanol, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone within a 3-minute run.
• Method precision and accuracy were consistent across columns of differing film thickness, demonstrating robustness.
Benefits and Practical Applications
• High throughput: 3-minute analysis time supports large sample volumes in forensic and clinical laboratories.
• Dual-column confirmation enhances data reliability and reduces false positives.
• Simple sample preparation with stable aqueous and blood controls ensures reproducible results.
Future Trends and Applications
• Integration of mass spectrometric detection for increased specificity.
• Miniaturized or portable headspace modules for point-of-care testing.
• Automated data analysis workflows using AI to streamline result reporting.
Conclusion
The described headspace GC-FID method with dual-column detection and AOC-6000 Plus automation provides a fast, precise, and robust approach for BAC determination. The strong linearity, baseline separation, and reproducibility make it well suited for forensic, clinical, and quality-control settings.
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