Analysis of Fungicide on the Peel Surface of Imported Oranges (1) — Identifying Substances by Simple Pretreatment and Accurate Mass Analysis
Applications | 2023 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
A rapid and reliable approach for detecting post-harvest fungicide residues on imported citrus is essential to ensure food safety, comply with import regulations, and reduce inspection turnaround time. Simple sample preparation combined with high-resolution mass spectrometry can streamline screening workflows and support regulatory laboratories in maintaining product quality and consumer protection.
The study aims to evaluate a novel coupling of a Direct Probe Ionization Mass Spectrometer (DPiMS QT) kit with a quadrupole time-of-flight LCMS-9050 system to identify the fungicide enilconazole on the surface of orange peels. Key objectives include demonstrating minimal pretreatment steps, verifying accurate mass detection, and comparing results against a standard reference.
Orange peel sections (5 × 5 mm, 1–2 mm thick) were placed in a biological sample plate and a micro-volume (35 µL) of extraction solvent was added through a port. The plate was folded to enclose the sample and positioned in the DPiMS QT system. Probe electrospray ionization (PESI) was used to sample a microdroplet from the peel surface, generating ions for injection into the Q-TOF mass analyzer. Analytical settings included an interface voltage of +2.50 kV, DL temperature 250 °C, heat block at 50 °C, and a scan range of m/z 50–1000 over 0.5 minutes.
Analysis of a 0.1 ppm enilconazole standard yielded a distinct protonated peak at m/z 297.0555, accompanied by its characteristic chlorine isotope pattern. The orange peel extract spectrum also displayed the same m/z signal and matching isotopic distribution, confirming the presence of enilconazole residues on the fruit surface. The high mass accuracy and resolution of the LCMS-9050 system ensured unambiguous identification without extensive chromatographic separation.
Advances in probe-based ionization combined with high-throughput data processing and machine learning could enable automated screening of multiple pesticide residues simultaneously. Miniaturized or field-deployable probe-MS systems may extend this approach to on-site inspections at ports of entry or in agricultural fields. Integration with robotic sample handling and AI-driven spectral libraries will further accelerate decision-making in quality assurance and regulatory compliance.
The combination of DPiMS QT direct probe ionization and LCMS-9050 Q-TOF accurate mass analysis provides a powerful, rapid, and easy-to-implement method for detecting post-harvest fungicide residues on citrus surfaces. Its minimal pretreatment requirements, high specificity, and flexibility make it an attractive tool for routine screening in food safety and industrial quality control laboratories.
LC/TOF, LC/HRMS, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, DART
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerShimadzu
Summary
Significance of the Topic
A rapid and reliable approach for detecting post-harvest fungicide residues on imported citrus is essential to ensure food safety, comply with import regulations, and reduce inspection turnaround time. Simple sample preparation combined with high-resolution mass spectrometry can streamline screening workflows and support regulatory laboratories in maintaining product quality and consumer protection.
Goals and Study Overview
The study aims to evaluate a novel coupling of a Direct Probe Ionization Mass Spectrometer (DPiMS QT) kit with a quadrupole time-of-flight LCMS-9050 system to identify the fungicide enilconazole on the surface of orange peels. Key objectives include demonstrating minimal pretreatment steps, verifying accurate mass detection, and comparing results against a standard reference.
Methodology and Sample Preparation
Orange peel sections (5 × 5 mm, 1–2 mm thick) were placed in a biological sample plate and a micro-volume (35 µL) of extraction solvent was added through a port. The plate was folded to enclose the sample and positioned in the DPiMS QT system. Probe electrospray ionization (PESI) was used to sample a microdroplet from the peel surface, generating ions for injection into the Q-TOF mass analyzer. Analytical settings included an interface voltage of +2.50 kV, DL temperature 250 °C, heat block at 50 °C, and a scan range of m/z 50–1000 over 0.5 minutes.
Main Results and Discussion
Analysis of a 0.1 ppm enilconazole standard yielded a distinct protonated peak at m/z 297.0555, accompanied by its characteristic chlorine isotope pattern. The orange peel extract spectrum also displayed the same m/z signal and matching isotopic distribution, confirming the presence of enilconazole residues on the fruit surface. The high mass accuracy and resolution of the LCMS-9050 system ensured unambiguous identification without extensive chromatographic separation.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- Minimal sample processing reduces analysis time to under one minute per sample.
- High-resolution accurate mass detection allows confident identification of target molecules and their isotopes.
- Qualitative screening by DPiMS QT can triage samples prior to full LC/MS quantitation, optimizing resource use.
- Method adaptability supports a broad range of solid or biological surfaces that fit the sample plate.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advances in probe-based ionization combined with high-throughput data processing and machine learning could enable automated screening of multiple pesticide residues simultaneously. Miniaturized or field-deployable probe-MS systems may extend this approach to on-site inspections at ports of entry or in agricultural fields. Integration with robotic sample handling and AI-driven spectral libraries will further accelerate decision-making in quality assurance and regulatory compliance.
Conclusion
The combination of DPiMS QT direct probe ionization and LCMS-9050 Q-TOF accurate mass analysis provides a powerful, rapid, and easy-to-implement method for detecting post-harvest fungicide residues on citrus surfaces. Its minimal pretreatment requirements, high specificity, and flexibility make it an attractive tool for routine screening in food safety and industrial quality control laboratories.
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