Determination of Fatty Acid Methyl Esters (FAMEs) in Salmon Oil Using Automated Sample Preparation
Applications | 2012 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
The accurate determination of fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) is crucial for assessing the quality and health benefits of salmon oil, a rich source of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Conversion of free fatty acids to methyl esters is essential to prevent chromatographic tailing and to achieve reliable quantification of key components such as EPA and DHA.
This study demonstrates an automated workflow for derivatization and analysis of FAMEs from salmon oil capsules using the Agilent 7696A Sample Prep WorkBench coupled to GC-FID. The approach aims to enhance reproducibility, reduce hands-on time, and deliver robust quantification of EPA and DHA in a routine laboratory setting.
Ten milligrams of salmon oil were loaded into a 2 mL vial and diluted with 500 µL TBME. Samples were vortexed for 90 s, and 250 µL aliquots were transferred to clean vials. Each aliquot received 125 µL TMSH and was vortexed again before heating at 80 °C for 5 min. The autosampler then injected 2 µL into the GC under the following conditions:
The GC-FID chromatogram resolved all targeted FAMEs, with EPA eluting at 35.07 min and DHA at 40.55 min. Quantitative distribution in salmon oil was: EPA ~23.7%, DHA ~20.0%, oleic ~12%, linoleic ~11%, palmitoleic ~8%, palmitic ~4%, and stearic ~5%. Repeatability tests on ten preparations yielded relative standard deviations of 0.85% for EPA and 1.22% for DHA. Automated derivatization required 20 min per sample versus up to 2 h manually, with significantly improved reproducibility.
Automation of FAME derivatization may be extended to diverse lipid matrices, including dairy, plant oils, and biological tissues. Integration with mass spectrometric detection could enable comprehensive lipid profiling. Further standardization and validation against ISO 12966 series methods will support broader adoption in regulated environments.
The automated Agilent 7696A workflow offers a fast, reliable, and reproducible solution for FAME analysis in salmon oil. It outperforms manual procedures in precision and efficiency, making it a valuable tool for analytical and quality-control laboratories.
GC, Sample Preparation
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the Topic
The accurate determination of fatty acid methyl esters (FAMEs) is crucial for assessing the quality and health benefits of salmon oil, a rich source of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Conversion of free fatty acids to methyl esters is essential to prevent chromatographic tailing and to achieve reliable quantification of key components such as EPA and DHA.
Objectives and Overview
This study demonstrates an automated workflow for derivatization and analysis of FAMEs from salmon oil capsules using the Agilent 7696A Sample Prep WorkBench coupled to GC-FID. The approach aims to enhance reproducibility, reduce hands-on time, and deliver robust quantification of EPA and DHA in a routine laboratory setting.
Instrumentation Used
- Agilent 7696A Sample Prep WorkBench
- Agilent 6890 Series Gas Chromatograph with FID
- HP-88 capillary column (100 m × 250 µm, 0.20 µm film)
- Trimethylsulfonium hydroxide (TMSH) derivatization reagent
- Tert-butyl methyl ether (TBME) as extraction solvent
Methodology
Ten milligrams of salmon oil were loaded into a 2 mL vial and diluted with 500 µL TBME. Samples were vortexed for 90 s, and 250 µL aliquots were transferred to clean vials. Each aliquot received 125 µL TMSH and was vortexed again before heating at 80 °C for 5 min. The autosampler then injected 2 µL into the GC under the following conditions:
- Carrier gas: H₂ at 1.4 mL/min
- Injection: split 50:1
- Oven program: 70 °C to 260 °C
- Detector temperature: 250 °C (FID with H₂, air, and N₂ makeup flows)
Main Results and Discussion
The GC-FID chromatogram resolved all targeted FAMEs, with EPA eluting at 35.07 min and DHA at 40.55 min. Quantitative distribution in salmon oil was: EPA ~23.7%, DHA ~20.0%, oleic ~12%, linoleic ~11%, palmitoleic ~8%, palmitic ~4%, and stearic ~5%. Repeatability tests on ten preparations yielded relative standard deviations of 0.85% for EPA and 1.22% for DHA. Automated derivatization required 20 min per sample versus up to 2 h manually, with significantly improved reproducibility.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Enhanced reproducibility and accuracy for polyunsaturated FAMEs
- Reduced analyst workload and turnaround time
- Ideal for quality control of omega-3 supplements and regulatory compliance
- Scalable and adaptable to high-throughput laboratories
Future Trends and Opportunities
Automation of FAME derivatization may be extended to diverse lipid matrices, including dairy, plant oils, and biological tissues. Integration with mass spectrometric detection could enable comprehensive lipid profiling. Further standardization and validation against ISO 12966 series methods will support broader adoption in regulated environments.
Conclusion
The automated Agilent 7696A workflow offers a fast, reliable, and reproducible solution for FAME analysis in salmon oil. It outperforms manual procedures in precision and efficiency, making it a valuable tool for analytical and quality-control laboratories.
References
- ISO 12966-3:2009. Animal and vegetable fats and oils – Gas chromatography of fatty acid methyl esters – Part 3: Preparation of methyl esters using trimethylsulfonium hydroxide (TMSH).
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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