Multiresidual Determination - Validating Specific Migrations from Packaging into Food Simulant Using LC-MS/MS
Applications | 2017 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Migration of monomers and additives from plastic packaging into food is a critical safety concern. Substances such as terephthalic acid, bisphenols and photo-initiators can transfer into food during storage and processing, potentially exceeding regulatory specific migration limits and posing health risks.
This work aimed to develop and validate a rapid, sensitive UHPLC-MS/MS method for simultaneous quantification of five target migrants—terephthalic acid (PTA), isophthalic acid (i-PTA), bisphenol S (BPS), bisphenol A (BPA), and benzophenone (BP)—using orthophthalic acid as an internal standard in a 50 % ethanol food simulant.
The analytical separation employed an Agilent 1290 Infinity UHPLC with a ZORBAX Eclipse Plus C18 column (2.1 × 100 mm, 1.8 µm) and a binary gradient of methanol and 0.1 % acetic acid in water. Detection was achieved on an Agilent 6460 Triple Quadrupole MS with Jet Stream ESI in both positive and negative MRM modes. Standard solutions (60–1,000 µg/kg) and spiked simulant (50 % ethanol v/v) were used to establish linearity, limits of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ), precision (repeatability and intermediate), and recovery following a 24 h contact at 40 °C.
• Chromatographic run time: 8 minutes for all analytes including the internal standard.
• LODs ranged from 1.9 µg/kg (BPS) to 12.6 µg/kg (BPA), and LOQs from 5.9 to 40.2 µg/kg, exceeding regulatory sensitivity requirements by factors of 50–1,923.
• Calibration was linear with R² values ≥ 0.992 across the tested ranges.
• Repeatability RSDs were between 1 % and 9 %; intermediate precision RSDs remained within 3 % to 15 %, except BP at 23 % for the highest level.
• Recoveries ranged from 89 % to 112 %, meeting accepted guidelines.
This multiresidue UHPLC-MS/MS approach reduces analysis time and solvent consumption compared to individual methods prescribed by EN standards. It supports regulatory compliance for specific migration testing in QA/QC laboratories handling diverse packaging materials and coatings.
Extension of this method to additional non-intentionally added substances (NIAS), emerging plasticizers, and higher-resolution mass analyzers could further broaden screening capabilities. Integration with automated sample preparation and data processing will streamline routine surveillance workflows.
The presented UHPLC-MS/MS method is fast, robust, and compliant with European and Mercosur specific migration limits. It offers reliable simultaneous quantification of key packaging migrants in food simulants, facilitating efficient monitoring of material safety.
LC/MS, LC/MS/MS, LC/QQQ
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Significance of the topic
Migration of monomers and additives from plastic packaging into food is a critical safety concern. Substances such as terephthalic acid, bisphenols and photo-initiators can transfer into food during storage and processing, potentially exceeding regulatory specific migration limits and posing health risks.
Objectives and study overview
This work aimed to develop and validate a rapid, sensitive UHPLC-MS/MS method for simultaneous quantification of five target migrants—terephthalic acid (PTA), isophthalic acid (i-PTA), bisphenol S (BPS), bisphenol A (BPA), and benzophenone (BP)—using orthophthalic acid as an internal standard in a 50 % ethanol food simulant.
Methodology and instrumentation
The analytical separation employed an Agilent 1290 Infinity UHPLC with a ZORBAX Eclipse Plus C18 column (2.1 × 100 mm, 1.8 µm) and a binary gradient of methanol and 0.1 % acetic acid in water. Detection was achieved on an Agilent 6460 Triple Quadrupole MS with Jet Stream ESI in both positive and negative MRM modes. Standard solutions (60–1,000 µg/kg) and spiked simulant (50 % ethanol v/v) were used to establish linearity, limits of detection (LOD) and quantification (LOQ), precision (repeatability and intermediate), and recovery following a 24 h contact at 40 °C.
Main results and discussion
• Chromatographic run time: 8 minutes for all analytes including the internal standard.
• LODs ranged from 1.9 µg/kg (BPS) to 12.6 µg/kg (BPA), and LOQs from 5.9 to 40.2 µg/kg, exceeding regulatory sensitivity requirements by factors of 50–1,923.
• Calibration was linear with R² values ≥ 0.992 across the tested ranges.
• Repeatability RSDs were between 1 % and 9 %; intermediate precision RSDs remained within 3 % to 15 %, except BP at 23 % for the highest level.
• Recoveries ranged from 89 % to 112 %, meeting accepted guidelines.
Benefits and practical applications
This multiresidue UHPLC-MS/MS approach reduces analysis time and solvent consumption compared to individual methods prescribed by EN standards. It supports regulatory compliance for specific migration testing in QA/QC laboratories handling diverse packaging materials and coatings.
Future trends and possibilities
Extension of this method to additional non-intentionally added substances (NIAS), emerging plasticizers, and higher-resolution mass analyzers could further broaden screening capabilities. Integration with automated sample preparation and data processing will streamline routine surveillance workflows.
Conclusion
The presented UHPLC-MS/MS method is fast, robust, and compliant with European and Mercosur specific migration limits. It offers reliable simultaneous quantification of key packaging migrants in food simulants, facilitating efficient monitoring of material safety.
Reference
- Fávaro M.Â., Padula M., Daniela D. Multiresidual Determination Validating Specific Migrations from Packaging into Food Simulant Using LC-MS/MS. Agilent Technologies Application Note, 2017.
- European Commission. Regulation (EU) No 10/2011 on plastic materials and articles in contact with food.
- Grupo Mercado Comum. GMC/Res. 02/12: Positive list of monomers for food contact plastics. Mercosur, 2012.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Assessment of Bisphenol A Specific Migration from Packaging Materials into Food Simulants Using UHPLC-MS/MS and LC with Fluorescence Detection
2014|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Assessment of Bisphenol A Specific Migration from Packaging Materials into Food Simulants Using UHPLC-MS/MS and LC with Fluorescence Detection Application Note Authors Mary Ângela Fávaro Perez, Marisa Padula, Jozeti Gatti, and Patrícia Cristina de Lima Food Technology Institute – ITAL,…
Key words
simulants, simulantsdistilled, distilledolive, olivebpa, bpaoil, oilmigration, migrationwater, waterfluorescence, fluorescenceembalagens, embalagensplásticos, plásticosequipamentos, equipamentosconcentration, concentrationresponses, responsesuhplc, uhplccans
MONITORING OF BISPHENOL A AND ITS ANALOGUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL MATRICES USING THE AGILENT 6550 Q-TOF LC/MS
2015|Agilent Technologies|Others
ENVIRONMENTAL analysis MONITORING OF BISPHENOL A AND ITS ANALOGUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL MATRICES USING THE AGILENT 6550 Q-TOF LC/MS Solutions for Your Analytical Business Markets and Applications Programs Authors Pawel Rostkowski and Martin Schlabach NILU – Norwegian Institute for Air Research,…
Key words
nilu, nilunorwegian, norwegianbisphenol, bisphenolsediment, sedimentmarkets, marketsniva, nivapawel, pawelrostkowski, rostkowskischlabach, schlabachprograms, programsbusiness, businesstdi, tdisamples, samplesbpa, bpadiatomaceous
Food contact materials
2018|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Guides
Table of Contents Executive Summary Background Plastics———————— Regulation in the USA Regulation in Japan EU regulations Council of Europe resolutions European Reference Laboratory (EURL) Rapid alert system for food & feed (RASFF) Analytical approaches to identify packaging and measure migration…
Key words
migration, migrationfood, foodplastics, plasticscontact, contactregulation, regulationmaterials, materialsrasff, rasffmigrants, migrantsdart, dartsimulants, simulantseurl, eurlexecutive, executiveleaching, leachingmigrating, migratingresolutions
Cooking Utensils: Determination of Primary Aromatic Amines by LC/MS/MS
2019|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Application Note Food Testing & Agriculture Cooking Utensils: Determination of Primary Aromatic Amines by LC/MS/MS Authors Mary Ângela Fávaro Perez and Marisa Padula Food Technology Institute, (Ital) Campinas, Brazil Claudimir Lucio do Lago Department of Fundamental Chemistry, Institute of Chemistry,…
Key words
loq, loqpaas, paasamines, aminesaromatic, aromaticmigration, migrationkga, kgasilicone, siliconecooking, cookingutensils, utensilsprimary, primarychina, chinapolyamide, polyamidefood, foodtoluidine, toluidineaniline