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Ultra Inert (UI) Wool Liner Performance Using an Agilent J&W DB-35ms UI Column with and without an Analyte Protectant for Organophosphorus (OP) Pesticides

Applications | 2012 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/SQ, GC columns, Consumables
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Organophosphorus pesticides are extensively used in agriculture but pose significant analytical challenges in gas chromatography due to adsorption onto active sites and peak tailing. Reliable detection at trace levels in fatty matrices such as olive oil is critical for food safety and regulatory compliance.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study assesses the performance of Agilent Ultra Inert wool inlet liners combined with J&W DB-35ms UI columns for the analysis of four organophosphorus pesticides (methamidophos, acephate, omethoate, dimethoate). It examines reproducibility and signal stability over 100 injections of QuEChERS-extracted olive oil matrix, with and without the addition of an analyte protectant (gulonolactone).

Methodology


  • Sample preparation: Modified QuEChERS extraction of extra virgin olive oil using acetonitrile, water, MgSO4 and sodium chloride, followed by dispersive SPE cleanup.
  • An analyte protectant solution of gulonolactone was added at 0.5 mg per mL to selected extracts to mitigate matrix-induced signal loss.
  • Calibration and surrogate standards prepared in acetone or toluene for accurate spiking at defined concentrations.
  • Injection protocol: 100 consecutive injections of a 250 ng/mL matrix standard; solvent blanks were run every ten injections.

Instrumentation


  • Gas chromatograph MSD: Agilent 7890 GC with 5975C mass selective detector and flame photometric detector via a purged two-way splitter (1:1 MSD to FPD).
  • Column: Agilent J W DB-35ms UI, 30 m × 0.25 mm i.d. × 0.25 µm film thickness.
  • Inlet liner: Ultra Inert single taper liner with wool for matrix trapping and inertness.
  • Injection: 2 µL splitless injections at 250 °C; helium carrier gas with postrun backflush.
  • Autosampler: Agilent 7683B with 5 µL syringe.

Main Results and Discussion


  • Repeatability across 100 injections showed relative standard deviations below 9% for all four pesticides without analyte protectant.
  • Inclusion of gulonolactone improved peak areas by 20 to 40% for methamidophos, acephate, and omethoate; dimethoate saw a modest enhancement.
  • Peak shapes remained stable over repeated high-matrix injections due to effective trapping of nonvolatile residues by the wool liner.
  • The combination of Ultra Inert liners and UI columns effectively reduces surface activity and preserves analyte integrity in complex matrices.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Extended liner lifetime and reduced maintenance due to minimized buildup of matrix residues.
  • Improved quantitation reliability for challenging pesticides in fatty samples, supporting accurate regulatory testing.
  • Adaptability to other sensitive analytes requiring inert flow paths and thermal protection.

Future Trends and Applications


Ongoing development of deactivation chemistries for liners and columns will further suppress active sites, enabling even lower detection limits in complex samples. Automated flow path conditioning and novel analyte protectants will enhance throughput and system robustness. Exploration of additional protectant compounds may improve analysis of a broader range of labile analytes.

Conclusion


The use of Agilent Ultra Inert wool liners with J W DB-35ms UI columns provides reproducible, high-integrity analysis of problematic organophosphorus pesticides in olive oil. Addition of gulonolactone as an analyte protectant further enhances signal strength and peak shape, offering a reliable approach for routine pesticide residue screening.

References


  1. Erney DR Gillespie AM Gilvydis DM Poole CF Explanation of matrix-induced response enhancement of OP pesticides J Chromatogr 1993 638 57–63
  2. Smith D Lynam K Organophosphorus residues in olive oil by GC FPD with DB-35ms UI Agilent Technologies publication 5990-7722EN
  3. Agilent Technical Overview Ultra Inert GC Columns publication 5989-8665EN
  4. Lynam K Semivolatile analysis with DB-5ms UI Agilent Technologies publication 5989-8616EN
  5. Anastassiades M Lehotay SJ Štajnbaher D Schenck FJ Fast multiresidue method employing dispersive SPE J AOAC Int 2003 86 412–431
  6. Anastassiades M Mastovska K Lehotay SJ Evaluation of analyte protectants for GC analysis of pesticides J Chromatogr A 2003 1015 163–184
  7. Meng CK Improving productivity and extending column life with backflush Agilent Technologies publication 5989-6018EN

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