Headspace Analysis of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC’s) in Contact Packaging Materials Using the HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer
Applications | 2009 | Teledyne LABSInstrumentation
Food packaging materials can emit volatile organic compounds upon heating or during storage which may pose health risks and affect food quality. Regulatory bodies require reliable analytical methods to identify and quantify such compounds and ensure compliance with safety standards.
This study aimed to optimize and demonstrate the application of the HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer in static mode combined with GC–MS to detect VOCs released from various food contact packaging materials under different temperature and mixing conditions.
The investigation employed a Thermo Fisher Focus gas chromatograph coupled to a DSQ II mass spectrometer and a Teledyne Tekmar HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer. Samples of five packaging types were placed in 22 mL vials and analyzed in static headspace mode. The platen temperature was varied (50–250 °C) and mixing was toggled to assess optimal release of VOCs. GC separation used a Restek RTX-VMS column with a temperature program from 40 °C to 230 °C. MS detection scanned m/z 35–260 with a solvent delay of 0.5 min. Compound identification was based on NIST library matching.
Optimal VOC detection occurred at 100 °C platen temperature; lower temperatures gave weak signals and higher temperatures caused sample charring. Each packaging material exhibited a distinct VOC fingerprint. Major compound classes included alcohols, ketones (notably 2-pentanone in four materials and isomeric ketones), straight and branched alkanes (C6–C18), and minor aromatics (benzene, phenol). The boil-in-bag rice film showed a unique late-eluting alkane profile. Blank runs confirmed system cleanliness.
Dynamic headspace analysis is under study to enhance sensitivity and lower detection limits. The HT3 platform’s flexibility to switch between static and dynamic modes supports expanded quantitative and trace-level analysis. Additional method optimization could allow broader screening of emerging contaminants in diverse packaging matrices.
The HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer coupled with GC–MS effectively profiles VOCs from food contact materials. The static headspace approach provides clear, reproducible fingerprints that enable product identification and regulatory compliance checks without extensive sample handling.
1. Thomas Hartman. Determination of Off-Odors and other Volatile Organics in Food Packaging Films by Direct Thermal Analysis-GC-MS. The Mass Spec Source. Vol. XIII, No. 4, p. 30 (Dec 1990).
GC/MSD, HeadSpace, GC/SQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific, Teledyne LABS
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Food packaging materials can emit volatile organic compounds upon heating or during storage which may pose health risks and affect food quality. Regulatory bodies require reliable analytical methods to identify and quantify such compounds and ensure compliance with safety standards.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study aimed to optimize and demonstrate the application of the HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer in static mode combined with GC–MS to detect VOCs released from various food contact packaging materials under different temperature and mixing conditions.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The investigation employed a Thermo Fisher Focus gas chromatograph coupled to a DSQ II mass spectrometer and a Teledyne Tekmar HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer. Samples of five packaging types were placed in 22 mL vials and analyzed in static headspace mode. The platen temperature was varied (50–250 °C) and mixing was toggled to assess optimal release of VOCs. GC separation used a Restek RTX-VMS column with a temperature program from 40 °C to 230 °C. MS detection scanned m/z 35–260 with a solvent delay of 0.5 min. Compound identification was based on NIST library matching.
Used Instrumentation
- HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer (static mode)
- Thermo Fisher Focus GC with Restek RTX-VMS column
- Thermo Fisher DSQ II mass spectrometer
Main Results and Discussion
Optimal VOC detection occurred at 100 °C platen temperature; lower temperatures gave weak signals and higher temperatures caused sample charring. Each packaging material exhibited a distinct VOC fingerprint. Major compound classes included alcohols, ketones (notably 2-pentanone in four materials and isomeric ketones), straight and branched alkanes (C6–C18), and minor aromatics (benzene, phenol). The boil-in-bag rice film showed a unique late-eluting alkane profile. Blank runs confirmed system cleanliness.
Practical Benefits of the Method
- Unattended operation with minimal sample preparation
- Rapid differentiation of packaging materials via VOC patterns
- Static headspace analysis suitable for qualitative screening
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Dynamic headspace analysis is under study to enhance sensitivity and lower detection limits. The HT3 platform’s flexibility to switch between static and dynamic modes supports expanded quantitative and trace-level analysis. Additional method optimization could allow broader screening of emerging contaminants in diverse packaging matrices.
Conclusion
The HT3 Automated Headspace Analyzer coupled with GC–MS effectively profiles VOCs from food contact materials. The static headspace approach provides clear, reproducible fingerprints that enable product identification and regulatory compliance checks without extensive sample handling.
Reference
1. Thomas Hartman. Determination of Off-Odors and other Volatile Organics in Food Packaging Films by Direct Thermal Analysis-GC-MS. The Mass Spec Source. Vol. XIII, No. 4, p. 30 (Dec 1990).
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
A Survey of Residual Solvents in Various Inks used in Consumer Product Packaging
2011|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
A Survey of Residual Solvents in Various Inks used in Consumer Product Packaging Application Note Abstract Food manufacturers use various printing inks on their consumer product packaging. These inks are typically used on the outside of the package, but are…
Key words
residual, residualstatic, staticdynamic, dynamiccrisping, crispingvocs, vocsinks, inkstemp, tempconsumer, consumerpackaging, packagingsandwich, sandwichmicrowavable, microwavabletop, topprinting, printingtetrachloroethane, tetrachloroethanedsq
Evaluating Consumer Products for Low Level Contaminants with High Temperature Dynamic Headspace
2011|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Evaluating Consumer Products for Low Level Contaminants with High Temperature Dynamic Headspace Application Note Abstract High density polyethylene (HDPE) and polyethylene terephthalate (PET) are widely used polymers for the storage of consumer products including bottled drinks. HDPE is typically used…
Key words
tray, trayfilm, filmpet, petoven, oventemp, tempmicrowave, microwavecold, coldpolymers, polymerscpet, cpetpolyethylene, polyethylenecompounds, compoundsdynamic, dynamicchloromethane, chloromethanegassing, gassingheadspace
A Comparative Analysis of Fuel Oxygenates in Soil by Dynamic and Static Headspace Utilizing the HT3TM Automatic Headspace Analyzer
2009|Agilent Technologies|Applications
A Comparative Analysis of Fuel Oxygenates in Soil by Dynamic and Static Headspace Utilizing the HT3TM Automatic Headspace Analyzer Application Note By: Anne Jurek Abstract This application note presents method development using classical headspace sample preparative techniques for the TM…
Key words
temp, tempppb, ppbpreheat, preheatconcentration, concentrationplaten, platentba, tbamixer, mixertime, timeetbe, etbetrap, trapmixing, mixingvariable, variablebake, bakelevel, levelstandby
Blood Alcohol Determination with Teledyne Tekmar HT3™ Automated Static/Dynamic Headspace Analyzer
2011|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Blood Alcohol Determination with Teledyne Tekmar HT3™ Automated Static/Dynamic Headspace Analyzer Application Note By: Roger Bardsley Introduction Analysis of biological fluids for volatile components by headspace analysis is routinely used by forensic laboratories around the world. One of the more…
Key words
area, arearatio, ratioacetaldehyde, acetaldehydeheadspace, headspaceblood, bloodethanol, ethanolalcohol, alcoholisopropanol, isopropanolacetone, acetonestatic, staticpressurize, pressurizemethanol, methanoltemp, temppropanol, propanolloop