GCMS
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike

The Thermal Desorption of Chocolate Flavoured Powder using Difficult Matrix Introduction (DMI)

Applications |  | GL SciencesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, GC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies, GL Sciences

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Chocolate-flavored powders are complex food matrices containing diverse volatile and semi-volatile compounds that contribute to flavor and quality. Efficient analysis of these compounds is essential for product development, quality control and authenticity assessment. The combination of difficult matrix introduction (DMI) and thermal desorption offers a rapid, solvent-free pathway to directly transfer target analytes to gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS), minimizing sample preparation time and reducing potential losses.

Study Objectives and Overview


This application note introduces a direct thermal desorption method for characterizing volatile components in chocolate-flavored powder using DMI. Key aims:
  • Demonstrate direct desorption of analytes without prior extraction or cleanup
  • Optimize desorption conditions for efficient transfer and trapping of volatiles
  • Assess the performance of GC–MS analysis following DMI

Methodology


A micro-scale thermal desorption approach was applied:
  • Sample preparation: 0.5–1 mg of powder loaded into a fritted microvial placed in a programmable injector liner
  • Desorption phase: The liner is swept under static carrier gas flow; cryogenic trapping concentrates analytes prior to injection
  • Transfer and separation: After cryotrap release, analytes are carried on-column with a split flow for GC separation

Used Instrumentation


  • ATASGL Optic 2-200 programmable injector
  • Agilent 5890 GC coupled with 5971 MS detector
  • SGE CO₂ cryotrap for analyte focusing

Main Results and Discussion


Thermal desorption at 250 °C for 2.5 min produced a total ion chromatogram (TIC) with well-resolved peaks over a 40 min run time. Key observations:
  • Major flavor compounds were effectively desorbed and separated on an HP5-MS column
  • Cryotrap focusing improved sensitivity and peak sharpness
  • Static desorption flow and rapid temperature ramp (16 °C/s) ensured reproducible results

Benefits and Practical Applications


Direct DMI thermal desorption offers:
  • Reduced sample handling, lowering contamination risks
  • Elimination of solvents and related costs
  • High throughput potential via automation with Focus DTD
  • Applicability to routine quality control and flavor profiling in food analysis

Future Trends and Opportunities


Advancements may include:
  • Integration with multi-dimensional chromatography for deeper profiling
  • Enhanced cryotrap technology for ultra-trace detection
  • Expansion to other challenging matrices such as spices, coffee or complex botanical preparations
  • AI-driven data analysis for rapid compound identification

Conclusion


The DMI thermal desorption approach streamlines volatile compound analysis in chocolate-flavored powders, delivering reliable GC–MS results with minimal sample preparation. Adoption of this methodology can enhance laboratory efficiency and analytical robustness in food quality assessment.

References


GL Sciences B.V. Application Note No. 079: Thermal Desorption of Chocolate Flavoured Powder Using Difficult Matrix Introduction. De Sleutel 9, 5652 AS, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
The Thermal Desorption / Pyrolysis of Glass Fibre Air Filters
Application Note No. 078 The Thermal Desorption / Pyrolysis of Glass Fibre Air Filters Diane Nicholas    Direct desorption of analytes from sample matrix to column Multi-step thermal desorption followed by pyrolysis of same sample in injector Can…
Key words
abundanc, abundancabundance, abundancecryotrap, cryotrapswept, sweptdesorption, desorptionturned, turnedpyrolysis, pyrolysisatasgl, atasgldiane, dianeanalytes, analytesnicholas, nicholaslinex, linexfirstly, firstlycombipal, combipalime
The Flavour Analysis of Yoghurt by Solid Sorptive Extraction and Direct Thermal Desorption-GC-MS
Application Note No. 074 The Flavour Analysis of Yoghurt by Solid Sorptive Extraction and Direct Thermal Desorption-GC-MS Diane Nicholas,   No sample preparation necessary Analyses semi-volatile compounds as well as the volatiles Instrumentation   ATAS GL Optic 2-200…
Key words
yoghurt, yoghurtmelba, melbaanalysed, analysedpeach, peachfritted, frittedflavour, flavoursorptive, sorptivedesorbed, desorbedprinciples, principlesappendix, appendixvolatiles, volatilesexpert, expertvent, ventsemi, semidesorption
Analysing Quaternary Ammonium Salts (QAS) in Seawater by Difficult Matrix Introduction (DMI)
Application Note No. 080 Analysing Quaternary Ammonium Salts (QAS) in Seawater by Difficult Matrix Introduction (DMI) Diane Nicholas • No sample preparation necessary • Removes water under controlled conditions prior to analysis • Retains the salt and involatiles within the…
Key words
involatiles, involatilesqas, qasdiane, dianenicholas, nicholasmicrovial, microvialdmi, dmiseawater, seawaterretains, retainsanalyse, analyseanalysing, analysingprinciples, principlesconc, concremoves, removesquaternary, quaternarysalts
The Focus Robotic Sample Processor as a Tool for the Multiple Analysis of Samples using Complementary Techniques
Application Note No. 085 The Focus Robotic Sample Processor as a Tool for the Multiple Analysis of Samples using Complementary Techniques Diane Nicholas    Multiple techniques using one instrument Simple to change between techniques Fuly automated analyses Instrumentation…
Key words
soap, soaptechniques, techniquessyringe, syringeheadspace, headspacerobotic, roboticprocessor, processorkit, kitfuly, fulystart, startchange, changegrated, gratedspme, spmescan, scanfocus, focusdiane
Other projects
LCMS
ICPMS
Follow us
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike