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Quantative analysis of allergens in cosmetics with GC/MS

Applications |  | GL SciencesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/SQ
Industries
Other
Manufacturer
Shimadzu, GL Sciences

Summary

Importance of the Topic


The control of allergenic fragrance compounds in cosmetics is vital to safeguard consumers against contact allergies. European regulations restrict certain fragrance allergens to 0.01% in rinse-off products and 0.001% in leave-on formulations. Consequently, manufacturers and testing laboratories require reliable analytical methods to ensure compliance and protect public health.

Objectives and Study Overview


This investigation focuses on establishing and validating a GC–MS approach featuring a programmable temperature vaporization injector (OPTIC) for the quantitative determination of regulated allergens in various cosmetic matrices. The study evaluates standard mixtures and real-world products—including creams, body oils, cleansers, and shower gels—to demonstrate method performance under practical conditions.

Methodology and Instrumentation


The analytical workflow comprises:
  • Sample preparation: Three standard solutions of target allergens at 10, 40, and 100 ng/µL (1 µL injection) and eight commercial cosmetic samples diluted tenfold in methanol.
  • Injector and liner: OPTIC 3 programmable temperature vaporization with DMI liner (L100011).
  • Autosampler and GC–MS: CombiPAL autosampler coupled to a Shimadzu QP2010 system equipped with an InertCap 5 MS/Sil column (30 m × 0.25 mm, 0.5 µm film).
  • GC conditions: split injection (100 mL/min), initial oven temperature 35 °C (5 s equilibration), ramp at 5 °C/s to 250 °C, 5 min hold; constant column flow of 1.0 mL/min.
  • MS parameters: full scan mode from m/z 35 to 350, scan speed 666 Da/s, acquisition from 3.0 to 29.5 min.

Key Results and Discussion


Retention times for individual allergens spanned approximately 12 to 26 minutes, consistent across standard mixtures: alcohols, aldehydes/ketones, and esters were clearly separated. Relative standard deviations (RSDs) for peak areas remained below 10% in both standards and real samples. In a cream-based product, measured concentrations included:
  • D-Limonene: 30.8 µg/mL (RSD 8%)
  • Lilial: 40.1 µg/mL (RSD 5%)
  • Cinnamaldehyde derivatives: up to 63.4 µg/mL (RSD ≤6%)
  • Benzyl salicylate: 67.1 µg/mL (RSD 3%)
These data confirm the method’s sensitivity and reproducibility for trace-level allergen quantitation.

Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method


The OPTIC PTV injector significantly reduces sample preparation by retaining high-boiling matrix components in the liner while transferring target analytes efficiently. Minimal dilution in methanol suffices for diverse cosmetic types. High precision (RSD <10%) and straightforward operation make this approach well suited for routine quality control, regulatory compliance testing, and product development in the cosmetic industry.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Advances may include coupling the OPTIC GC–MS method with automated sample handling for higher throughput, extending the analyte panel to newly regulated allergens, and integrating non-targeted screening workflows. Miniaturized or portable GC–MS platforms could bring on-site testing capabilities, and enhanced data processing algorithms may improve detection limits and deconvolution of complex mixtures.

Conclusion


The GC–MS method employing an OPTIC PTV injector delivers reliable, reproducible, and sensitive quantification of cosmetic allergens with minimal sample preparation. Its performance meets regulatory requirements and supports efficient laboratory workflows for compliance and safety assessment.

References


  • European Commission. Regulation (EC) No. 1223/2009 on cosmetic products. Official Journal of the European Union, 2009.
  • Horsting I. Quantitative analysis of allergens in cosmetics with GC/MS. Application Note No. 113, GL Sciences B.V.

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