NACRW: Representative, Two-gram Incurred Food Samples Using Mini-QuEChERS, Cryomilling and GC/MS/MS Analysis with a High Efficiency Ion Source
Posters | 2016 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
The accurate determination of pesticide residues in food commodities is critical for ensuring consumer safety and regulatory compliance. The development of more efficient sample preparation techniques can reduce costs, minimize solvent consumption, and increase laboratory throughput while maintaining analytical performance.
This study evaluates a miniaturized QuEChERS extraction protocol using 2 g samples combined with cryomilling and subsequent GC/MS/MS analysis equipped with a High Efficiency Ion Source. The goals were to compare its performance against the standard 15 g AOAC QuEChERS method in various incurred fruit and vegetable matrices and to assess limits of quantitation, recovery, and overall cost savings.
Sample Preparation and Extraction
Limits of Quantitation and Recovery
The mini-QuEChERS approach with 2 g samples and cryomilling, coupled to GC/MS/MS with a High Efficiency Ion Source, delivers quantitative results equivalent to the standard 15 g AOAC method. It offers cost, time, and solvent savings, making it an attractive option for routine multi-residue pesticide analysis.
GC/MSD, GC/MS/MS, Sample Preparation, GC/QQQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
The accurate determination of pesticide residues in food commodities is critical for ensuring consumer safety and regulatory compliance. The development of more efficient sample preparation techniques can reduce costs, minimize solvent consumption, and increase laboratory throughput while maintaining analytical performance.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates a miniaturized QuEChERS extraction protocol using 2 g samples combined with cryomilling and subsequent GC/MS/MS analysis equipped with a High Efficiency Ion Source. The goals were to compare its performance against the standard 15 g AOAC QuEChERS method in various incurred fruit and vegetable matrices and to assess limits of quantitation, recovery, and overall cost savings.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Preparation and Extraction
- Frozen commodities were chopped, homogenized, and cryomilled to achieve uniform particle size for 2 g aliquots.
- Mini-QuEChERS protocol: 2 mL of acetonitrile (1% acetic acid), Agilent Bond Elut AOAC salts, vortex, centrifuge, then dSPE cleanup using PSA, C18, and GCB sorbents.
- Internal standards (Parathion-d10, p,p’-DDT-13C12, triphenyl phosphate, captan-d6, folpet-d4) spiked to yield 50 ng/g; calibration range 0.5–50 ng/g.
- Agilent 7890 GC with Multi-Mode Inlet and back-flushing.
- Agilent 7010 Triple Quadrupole GC/MS with High Efficiency Ion Source.
- Data acquisition and processing with Agilent MassHunter software.
Key Results and Discussion
Limits of Quantitation and Recovery
- LOQs ≤ 5 ng/g (RSD ≤ 20%) achieved for 95–98% of 126 pesticides in carrot, tomato, and celery.
- For 86–90% of compounds, LOQs reached 1 ng/g across the three matrices.
- Pesticide concentrations measured in 2 g cryomilled samples correlated closely with those from 15 g homogenized samples (e.g., pyriproxyfen: 0.13 vs. 0.14 ng/g; iprodione: 2.0 ng/g).
- Cryomilling showed negligible impact on result comparability, suggesting homogenization alone may suffice in some cases.
- Mini-QuEChERS reduced sample preparation costs by 43–48%, driven by lower solvent, sorbent, and internal standard usage.
- Using a 0.5 µL injection with the High Efficiency Source extended instrument uptime and enhanced sensitivity.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Significant reduction in solvent and reagent consumption and associated waste.
- Lower cost per sample without sacrificing analytical quality.
- Compatibility with existing laboratory equipment and workflows.
- Improved sample throughput and smaller storage requirements.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
- Further automation and integration of cryomilling with robotic sample handling.
- Expansion to a wider range of complex matrices, including processed foods.
- Refinement of ion source designs for even greater sensitivity with sub-microliter injections.
- Application of advanced data processing and machine learning for enhanced screening and quantitation.
Conclusion
The mini-QuEChERS approach with 2 g samples and cryomilling, coupled to GC/MS/MS with a High Efficiency Ion Source, delivers quantitative results equivalent to the standard 15 g AOAC method. It offers cost, time, and solvent savings, making it an attractive option for routine multi-residue pesticide analysis.
Reference
- Agilent Technologies. GC/MS/MS Pesticide Analysis Reference Guide, publication 5991-2389EN.
- Agilent Technologies. Application Note 5991-5507EN.
- Agilent Technologies. Application Note 5991-6069EN.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Representative, Tw o-gram Incurred Food Samples Using Mini-QuEChERS, Cryomilling and GC/MS/MS Analysis with a High Efficiency Ion Source
2016|Agilent Technologies|Posters
Representative, Two-gram Incurred Food Samples Using Mini-QuEChERS, Cryomilling and GC/MS/MS Analysis with a High Efficiency Ion Source 1Agilent Technologies Inc., 2850 Centerville Road, Wilmington, DE 19808 USA Introduction Analytical results for a 2 g sample correlated with those using a…
Key words
cryomilling, cryomillingquechers, quechersmini, minihomogenized, homogenizedcost, costresidue, residuepesticide, pesticidemulti, multiincurred, incurredsample, samplehomogenization, homogenizationfrozen, frozenpersample, persamplecentrifuge, centrifugecommodites
Breaking Bad: Change lab habits with more ions
2016|Agilent Technologies|Presentations
Breaking Bad: Change lab habits with more ions Melissa Churley Joan Stevens Applications Scientists Agilent Technologies Old Habits Maintained New Approach Meeting QA/QC Maintained Maintenance need Injected volume 0.5 µl 2 µl Sample Preparation 15 g 2g 7/15/2016 2 Optimizing…
Key words
cost, costquechers, quechershabits, habitssample, sampleendosulfan, endosulfanless, lessachievable, achievabledspe, dspemini, miniloqs, loqswhat, whatpreparation, preparationsavings, savingsminiaturizing, miniaturizingmaintained
Reduce Cost of Pesticide Residue Analysis
2015|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Reduce Cost of Pesticide Residue Analysis An Application for Mini-QuEChERS with GC/MS/MS and a High-Efficiency Source Application Note Food Testing and Agriculture Authors Abstract Melissa Churley and Joan Stevens Laboratories responsible for ensuring food safety seek to reduce the cost…
Key words
quechers, quechersdispersive, dispersiveextraction, extractionelut, elutcaptan, captanpartitioning, partitioningpesticide, pesticidecarrot, carrotfolpet, folpettomato, tomatorecovery, recoverycelery, celerybond, bondaoac, aoacspe
Analytical Challenges for Pesticide Residue Analysis in Food: Sample Preparation, Processing, Extraction and Cleanup
2016|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Technical notes
W h i te Pap er 72048 Analytical Challenges for Pesticide Residue Analysis in Food: Sample Preparation, Processing, Extraction and Cleanup Richard J. Fussell, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Hemel Hempstead, UK Key Words Background Cleanup, Food, GC Orbitrap, GC-MS, LC-MS, LC…
Key words
extraction, extractionpesticides, pesticidesquechers, quecherscleanup, cleanuppesticide, pesticidesolvent, solventliquid, liquidresidues, residuesmethod, methodethyl, ethylresidue, residueacetate, acetateaccelerated, acceleratedextractives, extractivessample