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Fast, Quantitative Analysis of Residual Solvents in Cannabis Concentrates

Applications | 2018 | PerkinElmerInstrumentation
GC/MSD, HeadSpace, GC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
PerkinElmer

Summary

Importance of Topic


Cannabis concentrates such as extracts, tinctures, waxes and oils are increasingly used for medicinal and recreational purposes. Residual solvents from extraction processes can pose health risks if not removed to safe levels. Reliable analysis of these solvents is critical to ensure consumer safety, regulatory compliance and consistent product quality.

Objectives and Study Overview


This application note demonstrates a fast, quantitative method for detecting residual solvents in cannabis concentrates. The study focuses on pressure-balanced headspace sample introduction combined with gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) to achieve unambiguous separation and accurate quantitation of multiple target compounds in a single run.

Instrumentation


The analysis was performed using a TurboMatrix HS autosampler coupled to a Clarus SQ 8 GC/MS system (PerkinElmer Inc.).
  • TurboMatrix HS headspace sampler
  • Clarus SQ 8 gas chromatograph with mass spectrometry detection

Methodology


Sample preparation involved either averaging multiple 100 mg sub-samples diluted to 10 mL with dimethylacetamide, or direct injection of a 40 mg aliquot into the headspace vial. A multi-level calibration suite covered action levels for 18 residual solvents. Headspace conditions and GC temperature programming enabled elution of all compounds in approximately 7.5 minutes. Mass spectral detection resolved co-eluting pairs by their unique ion signatures.

Main Results and Discussion


Chromatographic separation of all listed solvents was achieved with a total runtime under eight minutes and a sample-to-sample cycle under 11 minutes. Two co-eluting pairs (pentane/ethanol and benzene/1,2-dichloroethane) were distinctly identified and quantified by mass spectrometry. Linearity across all targets yielded correlation coefficients above 0.9993 and precision with relative standard deviations below 2.3%. Reportable limits ranged from 0.48 to 57.6 ppm, well below California action levels when using a 1:20 dilution factor.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Headspace GC/MS offers rapid analysis, minimal maintenance and interference-free quantitation. The technique requires limited sample handling, reduces downtime, and allows detection of unknown contaminants. Laboratories benefit from faster throughput, reliable quality control and expedited product release.

Future Trends and Possibilities


Advancements may include automated high-throughput sampling, integration with data management systems, expanded analyte libraries, and tighter regulatory harmonization. Lower detection limits and real-time monitoring could further enhance safety and operational efficiency.

Conclusion


Pressure-balanced headspace GC/MS provides a robust, accurate and efficient solution for residual solvent testing in cannabis concentrates. The method meets stringent regulatory requirements, safeguards consumer health and supports optimized laboratory workflows.

References


  • Scott D. Residual Solvents in Pharmaceuticals by USP Chapter 467 Methodology, PerkinElmer Inc.
  • Musselman J., Solanky A., Arnold W. Increasing Accuracy of Blood-Alcohol Analysis Using Automated Headspace-GC, PerkinElmer Inc.
  • Griffith H. Measuring Environmental VOCs Using US EPA Method 8260B with Headspace Trap GC/MS, PerkinElmer Inc.
  • Marotta L., Tippler A. Monitoring VOCs in Beer Production Using Clarus SQ 8 GC/MS and TurboMatrix HS Trap Systems, PerkinElmer Inc.
  • California Bureau of Cannabis Control. Proposed Text of Regulations, July 2018.
  • Tippler A. An Introduction to Headspace Sampling GC Fundamentals and Theory, PerkinElmer Inc.

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