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Capillary GC Analyses of Chlorinated Pesticides in Apples

Applications | 1995 | MerckInstrumentation
GC, GC columns, Consumables
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Merck

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Chlorinated pesticides remain a concern due to their persistence and potential health impact. Regulation requires accurate detection and quantification of these compounds at trace levels in food products. Apples serve as a representative matrix for assessing pesticide residues in fruits consumed worldwide.

Objectives and Study Overview


The study evaluated three capillary gas chromatography columns with distinct stationary phases to screen 18 chlorinated pesticides at low concentrations in apple extracts. The aim was to compare nonpolar and low to intermediate polarity phases in terms of elution patterns, retention times and compound confirmation.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Samples were prepared by blending 50 g of apples with acetonitrile extraction, followed by hexane partitioning. Analytes were spiked into blank extracts and analyzed by split/splitless injection (1 μL, 45 s, 250°C) on a capillary GC system equipped with an electron capture detector (250°C). Three 30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 0.25 μm film columns were tested: a nonpolar PTE-5 and two low/intermediate polarity phases, SPB-608 and SPB-1701. Oven temperature was ramped from 100°C to 280°C at 6°C/min, using helium as carrier gas at 40 cm/s.

Main Results and Discussion


All 18 pesticides were separated on each column within 31 to 36 minutes. The nonpolar PTE-5 column eluted compounds according to boiling point, while the SPB-608 and SPB-1701 phases exhibited selective dipole-dipole and hydrogen bonding interactions, altering elution order. One coelution of endosulfan sulfate and DDT occurred on PTE-5 but was resolved on the polar phases. Recovery experiments on the SPB-608 column showed values ranging from 15% to 122%, reflecting variations in analyte behavior and extraction efficiency.

Benefits and Practical Applications of the Method


The combined use of complementary columns enhances compound confirmation and reduces false positives in regulatory testing. The method achieves low-level screening in under 40 minutes with simple injection and detection, making it suitable for routine quality control in food safety laboratories.

Future Trends and Opportunities


Future work may explore tandem mass spectrometry detection for greater specificity, miniaturized sample preparation to reduce solvent use, and automation of data interpretation using machine learning. Expanding to more complex matrices and emerging pesticide classes could further support regulatory compliance.

Conclusion


The comparative evaluation of nonpolar and polar capillary GC columns demonstrates reliable separation and quantification of chlorinated pesticides in apples. The approach provides a robust, efficient workflow for routine monitoring of pesticide residues in food products.

Reference


  1. Kaphalia BS Evaluation of hexane partitioning for pesticide extraction J Assoc Official Anal Chem 73(4) 1990
  2. AOAC Official Methods of Analysis 16th ed AOAC International 1990

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