Multiclass Determination of Organic Contaminants in Red Chili and Turmeric Powders
Applications | 2017 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Ensuring the safety of spices such as red chili and turmeric is essential due to their widespread use in food and medicinal applications. These matrices are rich in pigments, fats, and other co-extractives that complicate the accurate measurement of organic contaminants. A robust multi-residue analytical approach streamlines testing, improves laboratory productivity, and guarantees consumer protection.
This work aimed to develop and validate a single UHPLC-MS/MS method capable of simultaneously quantifying a broad range of organic contaminants—including over 235 pesticides, 20 pyrrolizidine alkaloids, nine mycotoxins, and six illegal dyes—in red chili and turmeric powders. By leveraging the high resolution of a UHPLC system and the sensitivity of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer, the method addresses regulatory requirements and minimizes matrix interferences.
Sample Cleanup:
Chromatography and Detection:
Method validation demonstrated:
This unified method offers high sensitivity, selectivity, and throughput for routine quality control and regulatory compliance in spice analysis. It reduces sample preparation time, limits solvent consumption, and minimizes instrument maintenance requirements.
Expanding the approach to other complex food matrices and integrating with high-resolution mass spectrometers or automated sample preparation platforms could further enhance throughput and analytical scope. Advanced data processing and machine learning may improve compound identification and quantitation in challenging matrices.
A single UHPLC-MS/MS workflow combining EMR–Lipid QuEChERS cleanup and dynamic MRM on a triple quadrupole system enables reliable, multi-class residue analysis in red chili and turmeric powders. The method meets stringent recovery, sensitivity, and precision criteria, supporting its adoption for routine food safety testing.
Sample Preparation, LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Ensuring the safety of spices such as red chili and turmeric is essential due to their widespread use in food and medicinal applications. These matrices are rich in pigments, fats, and other co-extractives that complicate the accurate measurement of organic contaminants. A robust multi-residue analytical approach streamlines testing, improves laboratory productivity, and guarantees consumer protection.
Study Objectives and Overview
This work aimed to develop and validate a single UHPLC-MS/MS method capable of simultaneously quantifying a broad range of organic contaminants—including over 235 pesticides, 20 pyrrolizidine alkaloids, nine mycotoxins, and six illegal dyes—in red chili and turmeric powders. By leveraging the high resolution of a UHPLC system and the sensitivity of a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer, the method addresses regulatory requirements and minimizes matrix interferences.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Cleanup:
- Modified QuEChERS extraction using acidified acetonitrile.
- Enhanced Matrix Removal–Lipid (EMR–Lipid) dispersive SPE, followed by a polish step to remove residual fats and pigments.
Chromatography and Detection:
- Agilent 1290 Infinity II UHPLC with ZORBAX RRHD Eclipse Plus C18 column (2.1×150 mm, 1.8 µm).
- Mobile phases: 5 mM ammonium formate/0.1 % formic acid in water (A) and methanol (B), 0.5 mL/min gradient.
- Agilent 6495 Triple Quadrupole LC/MS with Jet Stream ESI, dynamic MRM with fast polarity switching.
- Matrix-matched calibration (1/x weighted, quadratic) over 0.004–100 ng/mL depending on analyte class.
Main Results and Discussion
Method validation demonstrated:
- Recoveries between 70 % and 130 % for over 73 % of analytes in chili and 79 % in turmeric at spiking levels of 5, 10, and 50 ng/g (1, 2, 10 ng/g for aflatoxins and PAs).
- Limits of quantitation below European Commission maximum residue limits for most pesticides.
- Precision with RSDs < 20 % across triplicate injections.
Benefits and Practical Applications
This unified method offers high sensitivity, selectivity, and throughput for routine quality control and regulatory compliance in spice analysis. It reduces sample preparation time, limits solvent consumption, and minimizes instrument maintenance requirements.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Expanding the approach to other complex food matrices and integrating with high-resolution mass spectrometers or automated sample preparation platforms could further enhance throughput and analytical scope. Advanced data processing and machine learning may improve compound identification and quantitation in challenging matrices.
Conclusion
A single UHPLC-MS/MS workflow combining EMR–Lipid QuEChERS cleanup and dynamic MRM on a triple quadrupole system enables reliable, multi-class residue analysis in red chili and turmeric powders. The method meets stringent recovery, sensitivity, and precision criteria, supporting its adoption for routine food safety testing.
Reference
- Agilent Technologies. QuEChERS Sample Preparation Manual (5991-3326EN).
- Agilent Technologies. EMR–Lipid Brochure and Protocols (5991-6052EN, 5991-6057EN).
- European Parliament and Council. Regulation (EC) No 396/2005 on maximum residue levels of pesticides.
- Agilent Technologies. Pesticides and Environmental Pollutants MRM Database (G9250AA).
- European Commission. Guidance Document SANCO/12571/2013 on analytical quality control for pesticide residues.
- Stahnke H. et al. Reduction of Matrix Effects in LC-ESI-MS by dilution. Anal. Chem. 84 (2012) 1474–1482.
- APEDA. Indian Spice Export Regulations. apeda.gov.in (accessed 2017).
- Agilent Technologies. Method Validation and Quality Control Procedures for Pesticide Residues (SANCO/12571/2013).
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