Sensitive and Robust Detection of Pesticides Regulated in California in Dried Cannabis Plant Material
Applications | 2019 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
The legalization of cannabis in multiple jurisdictions has led to stringent regulatory requirements for pesticide residues to ensure consumer safety and product quality. California has one of the most comprehensive lists of pesticides requiring both LC/MS/MS and GC/MS/MS analysis, with low detection limits demanding sensitive and robust methods.
This study evaluates an integrated workflow combining a standardized sample preparation procedure with Agilent’s 8890 Gas Chromatograph and 7010B Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer. The goal is to quantify 43 GC-compatible pesticides regulated by the California Bureau of Cannabis Control at or below state-mandated limits.
A multimode inlet was employed for pulsed splitless injection of 3 µL extracts into an Agilent 8890 GC System equipped with a helium-driven Pneumatic Switching Device for midcolumn backflushing. Separation was achieved on dual 15 m HP-5ms UI columns with retention time locking. Detection utilized an Agilent 7010B GC/TQ with a High-Efficiency Source operating in dynamic MRM mode. Comprehensive MRM transitions were obtained from the MassHunter Pesticide and Environmental Pollutant MRM Database and optimized via MassHunter Optimizer for selected analytes.
All 43 target pesticides met California’s limits of quantitation, with 36 compounds ≤0.08 ppb in-vial (≤10 ppb in plant material) and all 43 ≤0.8 ppb in-vial (≤100 ppb in plant material). Key challenges for LC/MS analysis—such as captan, cis/trans-chlordane, pentachloronitrobenzene, and kinoprene—were quantified successfully by GC/MS/MS at lower LOQs than required. Instrument detection limits ranged from tens to hundreds of femtograms on-column. Calibration curves for all analytes exhibited excellent linearity (R2 ≥0.99). Backflushing and optimized injection reduced matrix buildup, extending column life and minimizing source maintenance.
This workflow delivers high sensitivity, reproducibility, and simplified method setup, enabling laboratories to comply with stringent state regulations. Midcolumn backflushing and retention time locking reduce downtime and method revalidation when replacing columns. The approach supports rapid multi-residue analysis in complex cannabis matrices with minimal carryover.
As more jurisdictions adopt comprehensive pesticide regulations for cannabis, GC/MS/MS methods will gain broader adoption alongside LC/MS/MS. Expanding MRM databases and automated optimization tools will facilitate rapid method development for emerging contaminants. Integration of high-efficiency sources and backflush technology promises further improvements in throughput and robustness.
A combined sample preparation and GC/TQ-MS strategy achieved sub-ppb quantitation for 43 regulated pesticides in dried cannabis. The method provides reliable compliance testing with minimal maintenance, demonstrating versatility for current and future regulatory requirements.
GC/MSD, GC/MS/MS, GC/QQQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the topic
The legalization of cannabis in multiple jurisdictions has led to stringent regulatory requirements for pesticide residues to ensure consumer safety and product quality. California has one of the most comprehensive lists of pesticides requiring both LC/MS/MS and GC/MS/MS analysis, with low detection limits demanding sensitive and robust methods.
Aims and study overview
This study evaluates an integrated workflow combining a standardized sample preparation procedure with Agilent’s 8890 Gas Chromatograph and 7010B Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer. The goal is to quantify 43 GC-compatible pesticides regulated by the California Bureau of Cannabis Control at or below state-mandated limits.
Methodology and used instrumentation
A multimode inlet was employed for pulsed splitless injection of 3 µL extracts into an Agilent 8890 GC System equipped with a helium-driven Pneumatic Switching Device for midcolumn backflushing. Separation was achieved on dual 15 m HP-5ms UI columns with retention time locking. Detection utilized an Agilent 7010B GC/TQ with a High-Efficiency Source operating in dynamic MRM mode. Comprehensive MRM transitions were obtained from the MassHunter Pesticide and Environmental Pollutant MRM Database and optimized via MassHunter Optimizer for selected analytes.
- Agilent 8890 GC with multimode inlet and PSD backflushing
- Agilent 7010B Triple Quadrupole GC/MS with HES
- MassHunter Pesticide & Environmental Pollutant MRM Database
- Retention Time Locking and Dynamic MRM
- Standardized SPE cleanup with SampliQ C18 EC cartridges
Main results and discussion
All 43 target pesticides met California’s limits of quantitation, with 36 compounds ≤0.08 ppb in-vial (≤10 ppb in plant material) and all 43 ≤0.8 ppb in-vial (≤100 ppb in plant material). Key challenges for LC/MS analysis—such as captan, cis/trans-chlordane, pentachloronitrobenzene, and kinoprene—were quantified successfully by GC/MS/MS at lower LOQs than required. Instrument detection limits ranged from tens to hundreds of femtograms on-column. Calibration curves for all analytes exhibited excellent linearity (R2 ≥0.99). Backflushing and optimized injection reduced matrix buildup, extending column life and minimizing source maintenance.
Benefits and practical applications
This workflow delivers high sensitivity, reproducibility, and simplified method setup, enabling laboratories to comply with stringent state regulations. Midcolumn backflushing and retention time locking reduce downtime and method revalidation when replacing columns. The approach supports rapid multi-residue analysis in complex cannabis matrices with minimal carryover.
Future trends and potential applications
As more jurisdictions adopt comprehensive pesticide regulations for cannabis, GC/MS/MS methods will gain broader adoption alongside LC/MS/MS. Expanding MRM databases and automated optimization tools will facilitate rapid method development for emerging contaminants. Integration of high-efficiency sources and backflush technology promises further improvements in throughput and robustness.
Conclusions
A combined sample preparation and GC/TQ-MS strategy achieved sub-ppb quantitation for 43 regulated pesticides in dried cannabis. The method provides reliable compliance testing with minimal maintenance, demonstrating versatility for current and future regulatory requirements.
References
- Bureau of Cannabis Control. California Code of Regulations, Title 16, Division 42. October 2018.
- Government of Canada. Pest Control Products Act (S.C. 2002, c. 28), current to October 3, 2018.
- Roy J-F et al. Agilent multiplatform workflow for pesticide and mycotoxin analysis in dry cannabis. Agilent Technologies Application Note 5994-0429EN, 2018.
- United States Environmental Protection Agency. Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances (7508W).
- Asanuma L et al. Comprehensive strategy for residual pesticide analysis in cannabis flower. Agilent Technologies, publication 5991-9030, 2018.
- Churley M et al. Sensitive pesticide analysis in cannabis by GC/MS/MS. Poster #60 NACRW, 2017.
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