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Accelerated Analysis of On-Site Pesticide Detection in Vegetables by Agilent 5975T LTM GC/MSD and TSP

Applications | 2011 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, Thermal desorption, GC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Rapid and reliable on-site detection of pesticide residues in vegetables is essential for ensuring food safety, reducing risk to consumers, and accelerating decision-making at production or distribution sites. Traditional methods often involve time-consuming cleanup steps and laboratory-based analysis, limiting throughput and responsiveness.

Objectives and Study Overview


This application note evaluates a streamlined workflow combining a Thermal Separation Probe (TSP) with a transportable Agilent 5975T LTM GC/MSD to perform direct analysis of semi-volatile pesticides in vegetable extracts. Key aims include eliminating cleanup, shortening analysis time, and maintaining sensitivity and selectivity for a broad range of compounds.

Methods and Instrumentation


Vegetable samples (cucumber, tomato, pepper) were homogenized and extracted using Agilent SampliQ QuEChERS AOAC kits. No further cleanup was performed. Aliquots of the crude extract were placed in 40 µL disposable micro-vials and rapidly heated in the TSP, desorbing volatile and semi-volatile analytes directly into the GC inlet. Agilent’s ChemStation controlled the LTM column method, and Deconvolution Reporting Software (DRS) with a retention-time locked pesticide library provided automated peak deconvolution and confirmation.

Used Instrumentation


  • Agilent 5975T LTM GC/MSD system with splitless TSP inlet
  • HP-5 ms LTM column (10 m × 0.18 mm × 0.18 µm) plus 1 m guard column
  • Thermal Separation Probe micro-vials (40 µL disposable)
  • QuEChERS AOAC Extraction kits (p/n 5982-5755)
  • Software: ChemStation, MSD Deconvolution Reporting Software (DRS), NIST08 library with AMDIS, Agilent RTL tool

Key Results and Discussion


  • Analysis cycle time of 2–3 minutes enabled rapid, on-site screening of 12 representative pesticides with clear peak shapes.
  • Repeatability tests on 17 organo-chlorine standards (1 µg/mL) yielded RSD between 2.3 % and 7.8 % in eight injections.
  • Fifty consecutive injections of uncleaned tomato extract demonstrated stable baselines and no liner fouling, confirming TSP’s ability to trap non-volatiles in the vial.
  • Blind-spike experiments (80 pesticides) achieved reliable detection at 100 ppb for most compounds, and full confirmation at 500 ppb using DRS deconvolution.
  • Real vegetable samples revealed three naturally occurring fungicides (pyrimethanil, procymidone, dimethomorph) without prior knowledge, showcasing the method’s screening power.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Elimination of cleanup steps reduces solvent usage, sample prep time, and labor costs.
  • TSP prevents matrix build-up in the GC inlet and column, extending maintenance intervals.
  • Portable GC/MSD configuration supports field or point-of-use testing in agriculture, food processing, and regulatory enforcement.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Integration of TSP-GC/MS into fully portable systems will further expand field capabilities. Advances in spectral deconvolution, AI-driven library matching, and expanded pesticide libraries will enhance sensitivity and broaden analyte coverage. Automated sampling devices and miniaturized mass spectrometers may unlock continuous monitoring in supply chains.

Conclusion


The combination of TSP injection, a fast-ramping LTM GC/MSD, and DRS with a retention-time locked pesticide library provides a robust workflow for on-site detection of pesticide residues in vegetables. This approach dramatically reduces analysis time and sample preparation while maintaining analytical performance.

References


  1. Jing H, Amirav A. Pesticide Analysis with the Pulsed-Flame Photometer Detector and a Direct Introduction Device. Anal Chem. 1997;69:1426–1435.
  2. Meng C. Fast Screening of Pesticides and Endocrine Disrupters Using the Agilent 6890/5973N GC/MSD System, Part II. Agilent Technologies; publication 5980-1057EN.
  3. Wylie PL. Screening for Pesticides in Food Using the Japanese Positive List Pesticide Method: Benefits of Using GC/MS with Deconvolution Reporting Software and a Retention Time Locked Mass Spectral Database. Agilent Technologies; publication 5989-7436EN.

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