Analysis of Methanol in Ethanol-based Sanitizer - No. 354
Applications | 2022 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
The accurate determination of methanol levels in ethanol-based sanitizers is vital for ensuring consumer safety and regulatory compliance. Methanol, even at low concentrations, poses significant health risks when present in hand sanitizers. By establishing a robust analytical protocol, laboratories and manufacturers can prevent contaminated products from reaching the market.
This application note presents a gas chromatography–flame ionization detection (GC-FID) method for quantifying methanol in both liquid and gel ethanol sanitizers. The primary goals are to separate methanol from ethanol and common impurities, achieve low detection limits, and demonstrate method repeatability using standard and real samples.
The analytical approach employs a direct injection GC-FID method with a polar capillary column designed for alcohol analysis. Key parameters include:
Calibration with a certified methanol standard (630 ppm in 99.5 % ethanol) demonstrated excellent linearity. Analysis of a liquid sanitizer sample revealed methanol at 16 ppm. Gel sanitizer samples diluted 40× showed clear separation of methanol, acetaldehyde, and ethanol peaks. The method achieved low detection limits suitable for regulatory thresholds and displayed consistent retention times and peak shapes across replicates.
Advancements may include coupling to mass spectrometric detection for confirmatory analysis, miniaturized sampling techniques for in-field testing, and automated data processing workflows. Integration with online dilution systems could further streamline high-volume routine screening.
The described GC-FID method provides a reliable, reproducible, and user-friendly protocol for detecting methanol in ethanol-based sanitizers. Its robustness and ease of implementation make it an excellent choice for laboratories tasked with ensuring product safety.
Shimadzu Corporation. Application News G337 (JP/ENG), ERAS-1000-0354, First Edition: Sep. 2022.
GC, Consumables, GC columns
IndustriesPharma & Biopharma
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The accurate determination of methanol levels in ethanol-based sanitizers is vital for ensuring consumer safety and regulatory compliance. Methanol, even at low concentrations, poses significant health risks when present in hand sanitizers. By establishing a robust analytical protocol, laboratories and manufacturers can prevent contaminated products from reaching the market.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note presents a gas chromatography–flame ionization detection (GC-FID) method for quantifying methanol in both liquid and gel ethanol sanitizers. The primary goals are to separate methanol from ethanol and common impurities, achieve low detection limits, and demonstrate method repeatability using standard and real samples.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The analytical approach employs a direct injection GC-FID method with a polar capillary column designed for alcohol analysis. Key parameters include:
- Column: SH-Q-BOND, 30 m × 0.53 mm I.D., 20 µm film thickness
- Oven temperature program: 40 °C hold, ramp at 5 °C/min to 200 °C, 5 min hold (total run time 37 min)
- Carrier gas: Helium at 15 mL/min constant flow
- Injection: 1 µL direct injection at 200 °C using a WBI-2030 inlet
- Detector: FID at 200 °C; H₂ flow 32 mL/min, air 200 mL/min, makeup gas (He) 24 mL/min
Used Instrumentation
- Nexis GC-2030 gas chromatograph
- AOC-20i Plus autosampler
- FID-2030 flame ionization detector
Main Results and Discussion
Calibration with a certified methanol standard (630 ppm in 99.5 % ethanol) demonstrated excellent linearity. Analysis of a liquid sanitizer sample revealed methanol at 16 ppm. Gel sanitizer samples diluted 40× showed clear separation of methanol, acetaldehyde, and ethanol peaks. The method achieved low detection limits suitable for regulatory thresholds and displayed consistent retention times and peak shapes across replicates.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High sensitivity and selectivity for methanol in complex matrices
- Simple sample preparation without derivatization
- Compatibility with both liquid and gel formulations
- Rapid throughput for quality control in manufacturing and regulatory testing
Future Trends and Opportunities
Advancements may include coupling to mass spectrometric detection for confirmatory analysis, miniaturized sampling techniques for in-field testing, and automated data processing workflows. Integration with online dilution systems could further streamline high-volume routine screening.
Conclusion
The described GC-FID method provides a reliable, reproducible, and user-friendly protocol for detecting methanol in ethanol-based sanitizers. Its robustness and ease of implementation make it an excellent choice for laboratories tasked with ensuring product safety.
Reference
Shimadzu Corporation. Application News G337 (JP/ENG), ERAS-1000-0354, First Edition: Sep. 2022.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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