Separation and Analysis of Bisphenol Compounds in Consumer Receipt Papers
Applications | 2017 | WatersInstrumentation
Understanding and monitoring bisphenol compounds in consumer products is critical due to their widespread use and potential health risks as endocrine disruptors.
This study aimed to develop and apply an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography screening method for the baseline separation of eleven bisphenol analogues and to test consumer receipt papers for their presence and transferability.
The phenyl-modified stationary phase provided π–π interactions that enhanced selectivity, achieving baseline separation of all eleven bisphenols within eight minutes. Application to four receipt types revealed only bisphenol S in hardware store and gas station receipts, confirmed by mass spectrometry. Contact transfer tests demonstrated that BPS readily transfers to a damp surface, indicating potential consumer exposure.
Advances may include routine quantitation by tandem mass spectrometry, expansion to environmental matrices, high-throughput monitoring of emerging bisphenol analogues, and integration of miniaturized or portable UPLC systems for on-site testing.
A phenyl stationary phase UPLC method provides an efficient tool for the separation and detection of eleven bisphenol compounds, enabling screening of consumer receipts and assessment of exposure risks from both residue and transfer.
HPLC
IndustriesMaterials Testing
ManufacturerWaters
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Understanding and monitoring bisphenol compounds in consumer products is critical due to their widespread use and potential health risks as endocrine disruptors.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study aimed to develop and apply an ultra-high-performance liquid chromatography screening method for the baseline separation of eleven bisphenol analogues and to test consumer receipt papers for their presence and transferability.
Methodology and Instrumentation
- Instrumentation: ACQUITY UPLC H-Class system with CORTECS UPLC Phenyl column (1.6 µm, 2.1 × 100 mm) and MassLynx 4.1 software
- Mobile phases: A) water, B) methanol, D) water with 0.1% formic acid
- Gradient: increasing methanol from 50% to 95% over 8 minutes; flow rate 0.3 mL/min; column temperature 30 °C; UV detection at 275 nm; injection volume 0.8 µL
- Sample preparation: stock solutions (1 mg/mL) of eleven bisphenols diluted to 0.1 mg/mL (BPS at 0.75 mg/mL); receipt extraction by methanol incubation; contact transfer simulation using dampened wipes
Main Results and Discussion
The phenyl-modified stationary phase provided π–π interactions that enhanced selectivity, achieving baseline separation of all eleven bisphenols within eight minutes. Application to four receipt types revealed only bisphenol S in hardware store and gas station receipts, confirmed by mass spectrometry. Contact transfer tests demonstrated that BPS readily transfers to a damp surface, indicating potential consumer exposure.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Rapid and robust screening of multiple bisphenols in real-world samples
- Ability to detect and quantify BPA alternatives such as BPS and BPF
- Insight into consumer exposure pathways through handling
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advances may include routine quantitation by tandem mass spectrometry, expansion to environmental matrices, high-throughput monitoring of emerging bisphenol analogues, and integration of miniaturized or portable UPLC systems for on-site testing.
Conclusion
A phenyl stationary phase UPLC method provides an efficient tool for the separation and detection of eleven bisphenol compounds, enabling screening of consumer receipts and assessment of exposure risks from both residue and transfer.
References
- Bisphenol A Extended Application Note. MicroSolv Application Note (APP-A327).
- La Rocca C, et al. Exposure to Endocrine Disruptors and Nuclear Receptor Gene Expression in Infertile and Fertile Women from Different Italian Areas. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health. 2014;11:10146–10164.
- Viñas R, Watson CS. Bisphenol S Disrupts Estradiol-induced Nongenomic Signaling in a Rat Pituitary Cell Line: Effects on Cell Function. Environ. Health Perspect. 2013;121(3):352–358.
- Croes K, et al. Relevance of π–π and Dipole-dipole Interactions for Retention on Cyano and Phenyl Columns in Reversed-phase LC. J. Chromatogr. A. 2005;1098:123–130.
- Berthelette K, Swann T, Fairchild J. Optimizing Selectivity Through Intelligent Solvent Selection Using CORTECS Phenyl Columns. Waters Application Note 720005607EN. 2016.
- Yang Y, et al. Simultaneous Determination of Seven Bisphenols in Environmental Water and Solid Samples by LC-ESI-MS/MS. J. Chromatogr. A. 2014;1328:26–34.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Multiresidual Determination - Validating Specific Migrations from Packaging into Food Simulant Using LC-MS/MS
2017|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note Food Multiresidual Determination Validating Specific Migrations from Packaging into Food Simulant Using LC-MS/MS Authors Abstract Mary Ângela Fávaro Perez1, Marisa Padula1, and Daniela Daniel2 The objective of this work was to develop and validate an analytical method for…
Key words
pta, ptabps, bpsbpa, bpamigration, migrationbisphenol, bisphenolfood, foodmonomer, monomersimulant, simulantspecific, specificwere, werecontact, contactiniciadoras, iniciadorasautorizados, autorizadoselaboração, elaboraçãoembalagens
Column Screening for the UPLC Separation of Plastic Additives as Part of Extractables and Leachables Workflows
2020|Waters|Applications
[ APPLICATION NOTE ] Column Screening for the UPLC Separation of Plastic Additives as Part of Extractables and Leachables Workflows Kenneth Berthelette, Thomas H. Walter, and Baiba Cabovska Waters Corporation, Milford, MA, USA APPLICATION BENEFITS ■ ■ INTRODUCTION Proper column…
Key words
uplc, uplcleachables, leachablescolumn, columnextractables, extractablesporous, porousadditives, additivesscreening, screeninghss, hssplastic, plasticpfp, pfpworkflows, workflowsnote, notechemistries, chemistriesapplication, applicationseparation
Optimizing Selectivity Through Intelligent Solvent Selection Using CORTECS Phenyl Columns
2016|Waters|Applications
Optimizing Selectivity Through Intelligent Solvent Selection Using CORTECS Phenyl Columns Kenneth D. Berthelette, Thomas Swann, and Jacob Fairchild Waters Corporation, Milford, MA, USA A P P L I C AT I O N B E N E F I T…
Key words
phenyl, phenylcortecs, cortecssudan, sudancort, corthrough, hroughecs, ecsuplc, uplctqd, tqdoptimizing, optimizingintelligent, intelligentdyes, dyesrhodamine, rhodamineselection, selectionselectivity, selectivityxevo
Analysis of bisphenol A leaching from baby feeding bottles
2017|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Agilent Application Solution Analysis of bisphenol A leaching from baby feeding bottles Application Note Consumer Products Author Abstract Syed Salman Lateef Bisphenol A can leach out from the plastic surfaces of food containers and Agilent Technologies, Inc. has been detected…
Key words
bisphenol, bisphenolbpa, bpabpf, bpfbaby, babybottles, bottlespolycarbonate, polycarbonatefrom, frommethod, methodwere, werelinearity, linearityunknown, unknownarea, areadispense, dispenseuhplc, uhplcheight