Determination of anionic polar pesticides and oxyhalides in beer and strawberry samples using IC-HRAM-MS
Applications | 2018 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
The reliable detection of polar pesticides, their metabolites, and disinfection by-products in food and beverages is vital for ensuring consumer safety and meeting increasingly stringent regulatory limits. Anion-exchange chromatography coupled with high-resolution accurate-mass mass spectrometry (IC-HRAM-MS) offers selectivity and sensitivity for ionic analytes that are challenging for conventional LC- or GC-MS approaches.
This study presents a unified IC-HRAM-MS method to quantify 14 anionic polar pesticides (including glyphosate, glufosinate, and their metabolites), perchlorate, and oxyhalide by-products (chlorite, chlorate, bromate) in complex matrices (beer, strawberries) within a 15-minute run time. Method performance, limits of detection (LODs), and applicability to real samples are demonstrated.
A Dionex Integrion HPIC system with eluent generation (15–75 mM KOH gradient), high-pressure degassing, and suppressed conductivity detection was coupled in-line to a Q Exactive Focus hybrid quadrupole-Orbitrap via an IC-MS interface for acetonitrile makeup. Key operating parameters:
Calibration in the 50–2000 ng/L range yielded LODs of 0.1–0.5 µg/L for oxyhalides, bromide, and perchlorate, and 0.05–1 µg/L for polar pesticides. Strawberry extracts revealed bromide (~100 ng/L) without detectable bromate or perchlorate. Beer samples (seven brands) showed glyphosate in a rice-barley beer, gluten-free sorghum beer, and non-alcoholic barley beer at sub-µg/L levels; recoveries ranged 78–95%.
This single-run IC-HRAM-MS approach streamlines monitoring of a broad panel of ionic contaminants, reducing the need for multiple analyses or derivatization steps. It supports food safety labs and regulatory agencies by delivering rapid, accurate, and trace-level determinations in diverse matrices.
Advances in high-pressure RFIC and Orbitrap mass analyzers will drive further reductions in analysis time and improved sensitivity. Expanded analyte panels (e.g., emerging metabolites, novel disinfection by-products) and fully automated sample-to-result workflows are anticipated, enabling real-time quality control in food production.
An integrated IC-HRAM-MS method was established for 18 anionic compounds in food matrices. The 15-minute analysis met sensitivity, selectivity, and accuracy requirements for regulatory compliance. Demonstrated success in beer and strawberry samples underscores its utility for routine food-safety monitoring.
Ion chromatography, LC/Orbitrap, IC-MS, IC/MS/MS
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the topic
The reliable detection of polar pesticides, their metabolites, and disinfection by-products in food and beverages is vital for ensuring consumer safety and meeting increasingly stringent regulatory limits. Anion-exchange chromatography coupled with high-resolution accurate-mass mass spectrometry (IC-HRAM-MS) offers selectivity and sensitivity for ionic analytes that are challenging for conventional LC- or GC-MS approaches.
Objectives and study overview
This study presents a unified IC-HRAM-MS method to quantify 14 anionic polar pesticides (including glyphosate, glufosinate, and their metabolites), perchlorate, and oxyhalide by-products (chlorite, chlorate, bromate) in complex matrices (beer, strawberries) within a 15-minute run time. Method performance, limits of detection (LODs), and applicability to real samples are demonstrated.
Methodology
A Dionex Integrion HPIC system with eluent generation (15–75 mM KOH gradient), high-pressure degassing, and suppressed conductivity detection was coupled in-line to a Q Exactive Focus hybrid quadrupole-Orbitrap via an IC-MS interface for acetonitrile makeup. Key operating parameters:
- Columns: Dionex IonPac AG19-4 µm guard (2 × 50 mm) and AS19-4 µm separator (2 × 250 mm) at 40 °C.
- Eluent: KOH gradient from 15 mM to 75 mM over 10 min, back to 15 mM by 11.5 min.
- Flow rates: IC 0.45 mL/min; makeup solvent (acetonitrile) 0.23 mL/min.
- Conductivity detection: ASRS 300 suppressor in external water mode (0.5 mL/min regenerant).
- MS: HESI II negative-ion mode, full scan 60–750 m/z (30k resolution), and t-SIM for quantifiers at 15k resolution.
- Sample preparation: QuPPe extraction for strawberries; simple dilution (10–100×) for beer.
Used Instrumentation
- Dionex Integrion RFIC HPIC system with EGC 500 KOH eluent cartridge, CR-ATC 600 trap, high-pressure degasser.
- Dionex IonPac AG19 and AS19 columns.
- Dionex AS-AP autosampler with cooling.
- Q Exactive Focus MS with HESI II probe.
- SRD-10 suppressor regenerant detector for safety interlock.
Main results and discussion
Calibration in the 50–2000 ng/L range yielded LODs of 0.1–0.5 µg/L for oxyhalides, bromide, and perchlorate, and 0.05–1 µg/L for polar pesticides. Strawberry extracts revealed bromide (~100 ng/L) without detectable bromate or perchlorate. Beer samples (seven brands) showed glyphosate in a rice-barley beer, gluten-free sorghum beer, and non-alcoholic barley beer at sub-µg/L levels; recoveries ranged 78–95%.
Benefits and practical applications
This single-run IC-HRAM-MS approach streamlines monitoring of a broad panel of ionic contaminants, reducing the need for multiple analyses or derivatization steps. It supports food safety labs and regulatory agencies by delivering rapid, accurate, and trace-level determinations in diverse matrices.
Future trends and potential applications
Advances in high-pressure RFIC and Orbitrap mass analyzers will drive further reductions in analysis time and improved sensitivity. Expanded analyte panels (e.g., emerging metabolites, novel disinfection by-products) and fully automated sample-to-result workflows are anticipated, enabling real-time quality control in food production.
Conclusion
An integrated IC-HRAM-MS method was established for 18 anionic compounds in food matrices. The 15-minute analysis met sensitivity, selectivity, and accuracy requirements for regulatory compliance. Demonstrated success in beer and strawberry samples underscores its utility for routine food-safety monitoring.
References
- Christison T., Gerardo L., Beck J., Rohrer J. Determination of anionic polar pesticides and oxyhalides in beer and strawberry samples using IC-HRAM-MS. Thermo Fisher Scientific Application Note 72765, 2018.
- PubChem. National Institutes of Health. https://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/
- ChemSpider. Royal Society of Chemistry. https://www.chemspider.com/
- US EPA. Pesticide Sales database. https://www.epa.gov/pesticides/chem_search
- European Food Safety Authority (EFSA). EFSA Explains: Glyphosate Risk Assessment. 2015.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. TN175: Configuring the Dionex Integrion HPIC System for High-Pressure RFIC. 2017.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. AN661: Rapid Analysis of Polar Pesticides in Foods by IC-MS. 2017.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. AN533: Perchlorate in Infant Formula by IC-ESI-MS/MS. 2017.
- ASTM D1193-99e1. Standard Specification for Reagent Water. ASTM International.
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