Development of Isotope Dilution-Liquid Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry as a Candidate Reference Method for the Determination of Acrylamide in Potato Chips
Author(s) -
SunYoung Park,
Byungjoo Kim,
HunYoung So,
YeongJoon Kim,
Jeongkwon Kim
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
bulletin of the korean chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.237
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1229-5949
pISSN - 0253-2964
DOI - 10.5012/bkcs.2007.28.5.737
Subject(s) - chromatography , chemistry , acrylamide , analyte , solid phase extraction , repeatability , sample preparation , tandem mass spectrometry , mass spectrometry , cartridge , liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry , isotope dilution , electrospray , matrix (chemical analysis) , analytical chemistry (journal) , materials science , polymer , organic chemistry , copolymer , metallurgy
An isotope dilution-liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometric method was developed as a candidate reference method for the accurate determination of acrylamide in potato chips, starch-rich foodstuff cooked at high temperature. Sample was spiked with 13 C 3 -acrylamide and then extracted with water. The extract was further cleaned up with an Oasis HLB solid-phase extraction (SPE) cartridge and an Oasis mixed-phase cation exchange (MCX) SPE cartridge. The extract was analyzed by using LC/ESI/Tandem MS in positive ion mode. LC with a medium reversed-phase (C4) column was optimized to obtain adequate chromatographic retention and separation of acrylamide. MS was operated to selectively monitor [M+H] + ions of the analyte and its isotope analogue at m/z 72 and m/z 75, respectively. Sample was also analyzed by the LC/MS with selectively monitoring the collisionally induced dissociation channels of m/z 72 → m/z 55 and m/z 75 → 58. Compared to the LC/MS chromatograms, the LC/MS/MS chromatograms showed substantially reduced background chemical noises coming from solvent clusters formed during ESI spray processes and interferences from sample matrix. Repeatability and reproducibility studies showed that the LC/MS/MS method is a reliable and reproducible method which can provide a typical method precision of 1.0% while the LC/MS results are influenced by chemical interferences.
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