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Quantitative and Repeatability Analysis of Trace Level Pesticides in Plantation Food by GC/MS/MS

Applications | 2011 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
GC/MSD, GC/MS/MS, GC/QQQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Ensuring the safety of fruits, vegetables and other plantation food products requires the reliable detection of pesticide residues at trace levels, often below 10 ng/mL. Conventional GC/MS methods can struggle with complex sample matrices and co-extracted interferences. Advanced GC/MS/MS techniques coupled with efficient sample preparation deliver the sensitivity, selectivity and robustness needed for regulatory monitoring and quality control in food safety laboratories.

Study Objectives and Overview


This work assessed a multi-residue pesticide analysis method using GC/MS/MS for 33 representative compounds across six food matrices (pear, orange, strawberry, flour, pepper, spinach). The approach combined QuEChERS extraction with Agilent’s 7890 GC/7000 triple quadrupole system. Key performance metrics—limits of quantitation (LOQs), linearity, repeatability and matrix effects—were evaluated to validate the method for routine trace-level screening.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Samples were prepared via the QuEChERS AOAC protocol: homogenized food (5–15 g) was extracted with acetonitrile containing 1% acetic acid, partitioned using Agilent extraction salts, and cleaned with dispersive SPE. Calibration standards (1–100 ng/mL) and a 10 ng/mL QC level were prepared in matrix blanks to compensate for varying matrix effects. Triphenyl phosphate (TPP) served as an internal standard at 100 ng/mL.

Used Instrumentation


  • Agilent 7890 GC with 7693B autosampler
  • Agilent 7000 series triple quadrupole MS
  • HP-5MS Ultra Inert column (15 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm)
  • Ultra Inert deactivated splitless liners with wool
  • Purged Ultimate Union capillary flow technology for routine backflushing
  • Agilent Pesticides and Environmental Pollutants MRM database (p/n G9250AA)

Key Results and Discussion


Most pesticides achieved LOQs of 1 ng/mL or lower in pear, orange, strawberry, flour and pepper matrices, with linear calibration curves (R² > 0.99) from LOQ to 100 ng/mL and repeatability below 15% RSD (n = 10). Challenging analytes—including methamidophos, 2-phenylphenol, omethoate and deltamethrin—required higher LOQs (5 ng/mL) in certain matrices due to co-eluting interferences or low ion response. Spinach extracts exhibited stronger matrix suppression, affecting several compounds and necessitating tightened QC monitoring. The use of matrix-matched calibration and active consumables maintained quantitation accuracy across diverse sample types. Ultra Inert liners with wool offered improved peak shapes, consistent response, and reduced maintenance compared to conventional liners.

Benefits and Practical Applications


  • Sub-ppb sensitivity and high selectivity for multi-residue pesticide screening
  • Extended column life and less frequent MS source maintenance via backflushing and inert consumables
  • Robust performance across a wide range of complex food matrices
  • Streamlined workflow suitable for high-throughput regulatory and QA/QC laboratories

Future Trends and Opportunities


Anticipated developments include automated sample cleanup to further reduce matrix interferences, expanded MRM libraries to cover emerging contaminants, enhanced retention time locking strategies for faster method deployment, and integration of online extraction techniques. Continuous improvement of inert materials and backflush technology will support even greater system uptime and data reliability.

Conclusion


The evaluated GC/MS/MS method, combining QuEChERS extraction with Agilent’s triple quadrupole platform and Ultra Inert consumables, reliably quantifies 33 pesticides at trace levels in six diverse food matrices. It delivers LOQs down to 1 ng/mL (with a few exceptions at 5 ng/mL), excellent linearity and repeatability, and manageable matrix effects through matrix-matched calibration.

References


  1. M. Anastassiades, S.J. Lehotay, “Fast and Easy Multiresidue Method Employing Acetonitrile Extraction/Partitioning and Dispersive Solid-Phase Extraction for the Determination of Pesticide Residues in Produce,” J. AOAC Int., 2003, 86, 412–431.
  2. L. Zhao, D. Schultz, J. Stevens, “Analysis of Pesticide Residues in Apple Using Agilent SampliQ QuEChERS AOAC Kits by GC/MS,” Agilent Technologies Application Note 5990-4068EN.
  3. L. Zhao, J. Stevens, “Analysis of Pesticide Residues in Spinach Using Agilent SampliQ QuEChERS AOAC Kits by GC/MS,” Agilent Technologies Application Note 5990-4305EN.
  4. M.J. Szelewski, B. Quimby, “New Tools for Rapid Pesticide Analysis in High Matrix Samples,” Agilent Technologies Publication 5989-1716EN.
  5. C.-K. Meng, “Improving Productivity and Extending Column Life with Backflush,” Agilent Technologies Publication 5989-6018EN.
  6. P.L. Wylie, C.-K. Meng, “A Method for the Trace Analysis of 175 Pesticides Using the Agilent Triple Quadrupole GC/MS/MS,” Agilent Technologies Publication 5990-3578EN.
  7. L. Zhao, D. Mao, A. Vickers, “Evaluation of the Agilent Ultra Inert Deactivation for Active Compounds Analysis by GC,” Agilent Technologies Publication 5990-7380EN.
  8. V. Giarrocco, B. Quimby, “Retention Time Locking: Concepts and Applications,” Agilent Technologies Publication 5966-2469EN.

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