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Solid Phase Extraction of 200 Pesticides from Fruits and Vegetables, for Analysis by GC or HPLC

Applications | 1999 | MerckInstrumentation
Sample Preparation, Consumables
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Merck

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Ensuring the safety of fruits and vegetables requires reliable methods for detecting a wide range of pesticide residues. Multi-residue analysis enables regulatory agencies and food producers to monitor compliance with maximum residue limits, protect public health, and support quality assurance in food production. Advances in solid phase extraction (SPE) sorbents and analytical instrumentation have streamlined sample preparation and improved detection of hundreds of pesticide compounds in complex matrices.

Objectives and Study Overview


This work aimed to develop a rapid, reproducible cleanup and analysis procedure for over 200 pesticides in fruits and vegetables. Researchers at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada evaluated carbon-based ENVI-Carb SPE tubes to replace labor-intensive charcoal/Celite minicolumns and compared recoveries against conventional silica-based C8 and C18 sorbents. The methodology supports both quick screening and in-depth analysis of trace residues.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Sample Preparation and Cleanup
  • Homogenized fruit or vegetable extracts were loaded onto ENVI-Carb SPE tubes (3 mL/250 mg or 6 mL/250–500 mg packing).
  • Optional additional cleanup used sequential C18 and amino (NH2) tubes to remove polar and nonpolar interferences.
  • Elution solvents and SPE conditions optimized for broad retention of polar, nonpolar, and semi-volatile pesticides.
Analytical Detection
  • Gas chromatography with mass-selective detection (GC-MS) for organochlorine, organophosphorus, and nitrogen-containing pesticides. Identification based on retention times and ion ratios.
  • High-performance liquid chromatography with UV detection (HPLC-UV) for carbamate pesticides, including post-column derivatization.
Primary instrumentation included ENVI-Carb SPE tubes, C18 and NH2 SPE cartridges, capillary GC-MS systems, and HPLC-UV modules.

Main Results and Discussion


Pesticide recoveries across kiwi, sugar beet, squash, and peas consistently exceeded 90% for key organochlorine and organophosphorus compounds, with relative standard deviations under 10%. Nitrogen-containing triazines achieved recoveries above 89% for atrazine, cyanazine, and simazine. Carbamate analysis by HPLC-UV also demonstrated robust detection limits and good reproducibility. ENVI-Carb tubes outperformed charcoal/Celite and exhibited results comparable or superior to silica-based C8/C18 sorbents, especially for polar analytes. The nonporous carbon surface allowed rapid sample processing and uniform analyte retention, while weak ion-exchange properties expanded the range of extractable compounds.

Benefits and Practical Applications


This SPE-GC/HPLC approach offers clear advantages:
  • High recoveries and low variability for over 200 pesticides.
  • Elimination of time-consuming minicolumn packing steps.
  • Reduced solvent consumption and faster flow rates due to nonporous carbon sorbent.
  • Flexibility to perform both screening and confirmatory analyses in routine QA/QC and regulatory monitoring.

Future Trends and Applications


Emerging directions include integration of nonporous carbon SPE into automated and on-line platforms, coupling with tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS, GC-MS/MS) for enhanced sensitivity and specificity, and development of greener solvents and sorbents. Miniaturized and multiplexed SPE formats will further accelerate high-throughput pesticide screening in food safety laboratories.

Conclusion


ENVI-Carb solid phase extraction tubes provide an efficient, robust solution for extracting a broad spectrum of pesticide residues from fruits and vegetables. When paired with GC-MS and HPLC-UV detection, this workflow delivers high recoveries, excellent reproducibility, and streamlined sample preparation, meeting the needs of food safety testing and regulatory compliance.

References


1. Fillion J, Hindle R, Lacroix M, Selwyn J. Multiresidue cleanup and analysis of pesticides in food by SPE and GC. Journal of AOAC International. 1995;78(5):1252–1266.
2. Chaput D. Postcolumn derivatization methods for carbamate pesticides by HPLC-UV. Journal of the Association of Official Analytical Chemists. 1988;71:542–546.
3. Andreolini F, et al. Characterization of carbon surface interactions in SPE. Analytical Chemistry. 1987;59:1720.

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