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Analysis of Suspected Flavor and Fragrance Allergens in Cosmetics Using the 7890A GC and Capillary Column Backflush

Applications | 2007 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Monitoring flavor and fragrance allergens in cosmetics is critical to comply with EU regulations and to protect consumer health. Cosmetic matrices often contain nonvolatile components such as surfactants, waxes and lipids that can contaminate GC systems. A robust analytical approach must achieve low-ppm detection limits, cover a wide volatility and polarity range, and minimize sample preparation to suit high-throughput quality control environments.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study aims to develop a rapid, reproducible GC-MS method for the analysis of seven regulated fragrance allergens in cosmetic formulations. By combining a short capillary column, hydrogen carrier gas and capillary column backflush via a QuickSwap device, the method seeks to reduce run time, eliminate carryover, and suppress contamination without specialized sample introduction hardware.

Methodology and Instrumentation


  • Sample Preparation: Cosmetic samples (e.g., shampoo) were diluted to 5% w/v in acetone or dichloromethane, sonicated for 15 minutes, then centrifuged and transferred to vials.
  • Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry: An Agilent 7890A GC coupled to a 5975 MSD and equipped with a 7683 autosampler was used. A 15 m×0.25 mm×0.25 µm HP-5MS column and hydrogen at 11 psi constant pressure provided a threefold speed increase versus a 30 m RTL method.
  • Backflush Setup: At 8 minutes, inlet pressure was reduced to 2 psi and auxiliary pressure raised to 70 psi to reverse flow for 2.75 minutes at 240 °C, removing nonvolatile matrix.

Main Results and Discussion


  • Seven allergens (limonene, linalool, eugenol, lilial, hexyl cinnamaldehyde, benzyl benzoate, benzyl salicylate) were baseline-separated within 8 minutes.
  • Retention time RSDs were below 0.03% and peak area RSDs averaged 1.95%, demonstrating excellent repeatability.
  • Capillary column backflush eliminated ghost peaks and baseline drift caused by surfactants and high-boiling residues.
  • Compared to conventional bake-out at 320 °C, backflush shortened total cycle time by 20% and prolonged column and source lifetime.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The direct injection approach with capillary backflush simplifies routine screening workflows by avoiding selective extraction steps, reducing maintenance frequency, and enabling high sample throughput. It is particularly suitable for QC laboratories monitoring wash-off and leave-on cosmetic products under regulatory limits.

Future Trends and Potential Applications


Capillary backflush technology can be extended to other column chemistries, including polar phases with lower temperature limits, and to diverse sample matrices such as creams, lotions or complex botanical extracts. Integration with automated liner exchange or programmed temperature vaporization may further enhance sensitivity and throughput.

Conclusion


The presented GC-MS method using a 15 m HP-5MS column, hydrogen carrier gas and QuickSwap-enabled capillary backflush achieves rapid, reliable analysis of fragrance allergens with minimal system contamination. It delivers a threefold reduction in analysis time, consistent quantitation at ppm levels, and significant operational savings in routine cosmetic testing.

References


  1. Directive 2003/15/EC, Official Journal of the European Union, L 66/26 (2003)
  2. David F., Devos C., Sandra P., LC·GC Europe 19, 602–616 (2005)
  3. David F., Devos C., Joulain D., Chaintreau A., Sandra P., J. Sep. Sci. 29, 1587–1594 (2006)

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