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Intelligent Agilent GC/MS/MS (HydroInert Application Compendium)

Guides | 2023 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/MS/MS, GC/QQQ
Industries
Environmental, Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC/MS) is a cornerstone of pesticide residue analysis. Helium, the conventional carrier gas, faces supply constraints and rising costs. Hydrogen presents a sustainable alternative offering faster separations and reduced operating expenses. However, hydrogen’s reactivity in the ion source demands method adaptations to preserve sensitivity, spectral fidelity, and quantitative accuracy.

Objectives and Study Overview


This work demonstrates a robust workflow for analyzing over 200 GC-amenable pesticides in complex pigmented food matrices using hydrogen as the carrier gas. Key goals include:
  • Translating existing helium-based methods to hydrogen while matching retention times and maintaining chromatographic resolution.
  • Identifying optimal injection, sample preparation, and mass spectrometer source configurations to avoid in-source reactions.
  • Validating method performance according to SANTE/11312/2021 guidelines for quantitation at or below default maximum residue limits (10 ppb).
  • Demonstrating simultaneous dynamic MRM and full-scan acquisition for targeted quantitation and compound identification in a single run.

Applied Instrumentation


The analysis employed Agilent 8890 gas chromatographs coupled to 7000E and 7010C triple-quadrupole mass spectrometers. Key components included:
  • Programmable multimode inlet in solvent-vent mode with a 2 mm dimpled liner for large-volume injection.
  • Dual 20 m × 0.18 mm × 0.18 µm Agilent HP-5ms UI columns configured for mid-column backflush (20 min run) or rapid 10 min screening.
  • Agilent HydroInert electron ionization source (7000E) or High Efficiency Source (HES) (7010C) to suppress in-source hydrogen reactions.
  • Agilent MassHunter software for acquisition (v 10.2), quantitation (v 10.1), and qualitative analysis (v 10.0).

Methodology


Sample preparation combined QuEChERS extraction and Agilent Captiva EMR–HCF pass-through cleanup to remove pigments and lipids. Analyte protectants (ethylglycerol, D-sorbitol, L-gulonolactone) were introduced by sandwich injection to stabilize labile compounds. Method translation and retention time locking aligned hydrogen methods to established helium retention schedules. Dynamic MRM (up to 614 transitions) and simultaneous dMRM/scan acquisition enabled sensitive quantitation and spectral screening without additional runs.

Main Results and Discussion


Chromatographic resolution improved under hydrogen, with precise retention time matching achieved through method translation. The HydroInert and HES sources preserved mass spectra of nitro- and halogenated pesticides that react in a standard source. Sub-ppb method detection limits were achieved for most targets; HES delivered the highest sensitivity, often to 0.1 ppb. Calibration curves (linear or quadratic, 1/x weighting) met SANTE criteria, with relative standard errors below 20% for over 94% of compounds. Simultaneous dMRM/scan mode successfully quantified and identified compounds (e.g., tecnazene at 10 ppb) in a single injection.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Switching to hydrogen reduces operating costs, accelerates analyses, and alleviates helium supply concerns. The validated method supports high-throughput pesticide screening in challenging food matrices, ensuring regulatory compliance and maintaining analytical performance. The ability to reuse existing MRM libraries and retention data minimizes method redevelopment efforts.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Advances may include ultrafast GC columns, on-line sample preparation, and AI-driven deconvolution for enhanced throughput and sensitivity. Expanded hydrogen use will drive greener laboratory practices. Integration with high-resolution mass spectrometry and spectral libraries will further streamline screening and identification.

Conclusion


The study establishes a comprehensive GC/TQ approach for pesticide residues using hydrogen carrier gas. Optimized injection, novel EI sources, and rigorous validation yielded robust, sensitive, and precise quantitation at regulatory levels. The methodology facilitates rapid, cost-effective pesticide monitoring in complex matrices.

References


  1. Agilent Technologies (2020) EI GC/MS Instrument Helium to Hydrogen Carrier Gas Conversion Guide, publication 5994-2312EN.
  2. Andrianova, A. A. et al. (2022) Five Keys to Unlock Maximum Performance in the Analysis of Over 200 Pesticides by GC/MS/MS, application note 5994-4965EN.
  3. Henry, A. S. (2022) Analysis of Semivolatile Organic Compounds with Hydrogen Carrier Gas and the Agilent HydroInert Source, application note 5994-4891EN.
  4. Quimby, B. D.; Andrianova, A. A. (2022) Volatile Organic Compounds Analysis in Drinking Water Using Hydrogen Carrier Gas and HydroInert Source, 5994-4963EN.

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