| Literature DB >> 28386885 |
Ge Yin1, Ioannis Athanassiadis1, Åke Bergman1,2,3, Yihui Zhou4,5, Yanling Qiu6, Lillemor Asplund1.
Abstract
The acaricide, dicofol, is a well-known pesticide and partly a substitute for dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT). Only few reports on environmental occurrence and concentrations have been reported calling for improvements. Hence, an analytical method was further developed for dicofol and dichlorobenzophenone (DCBP) to enable assessments of their environmental occurrence. Concentrated sulfuric acid was used to remove lipids and to separate dicofol from DCBP. On-column injection was used as an alternative to splitless injection to protect dicofol from thermal decomposition. By the method presented herein, it is possible to quantify dicofol and DCBP in the same samples. Arctic cod (Gadus morhua) were spiked at two dose levels and the recoveries were determined. The mean recovery for dicofol was 65% at the low dose (1 ng) and 77% at the high dose (10 ng). The mean recovery for DCBP was 99% at the low dose (9.2 ng) and 146% at the high dose (46 ng). The method may be further improved by use of another lipid removal method, e.g., gel permeation chromatography. The method implies a step forward in dicofol environmental assessments.Entities:
Keywords: Analysis; Cod; Kelthane; On-column injection; α-Cl-DDT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28386885 PMCID: PMC5434158 DOI: 10.1007/s11356-017-8956-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Sci Pollut Res Int ISSN: 0944-1344 Impact factor: 4.223
Fig. 1Chemical structure of contaminants involved in the study
Fig. 2Scheme for analysis of the analytes used in the recovery study
Recovery (%) of 4,4′-dicofol (Difocol), 4,4′- dichlorobenzophenone (DCBP), and their corresponding surrogate standards, 2,2′,3,3′,4,5,6,6′-octachlorobiphenyl (CB-200) and 4′-Me-5′-MeSO2-CB106 (MSF-IS), respectively, in cod samples
| Dose spiked | Dicofol | CB-200 | Dicofol | CB-200 | DCBP | MSF-IS | DCBP | MSF-IS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 ng | 2 ng | 10 ng | 2 ng | 9.2 ng | 2.5 ng | 46 ng | 2.5 ng | |
| Cod 1 | 77 | 89 | 78 | 97 | 133 | 142 | 151 | 117 |
| Cod 2 | 68 | 76 | 67 | 93 | 62 | 82 | 140 | 96 |
| Cod 3 | 56 | 62 | 82 | 100 | 90 | 138 | 152 | 119 |
| Cod 4 | 62 | 74 | 69 | 89 | 100 | 100 | 154 | 131 |
| Cod 5 | 65 | 84 | 81 | 99 | 108 | 123 | 132 | 92 |
| Mean | 65 | 77 | 75 | 96 | 99 | 117 | 146 | 111 |
| SD | 8 | 10 | 7 | 4 | 26 | 25 | 9 | 17 |
The test solution was spiked with 1 ng dicofol and 9.2 ng DCBP for the low dose and 10 ng and 46 ng for the high dose, respectively
Fig. 3GC-ECD chromatogram of 4,4′-dicofol (Dicofol) and 2,2′,3,3′,4,5,6,6′-octachlorobiphenyl (CB200) recovery study on cod by on-column injection. a Dicofol reference. b Dicofol low dose (1 ng). c Dicofol high dose (10 ng). CB201 spiked as volumetric standard
Fig. 4GC-ECD chromatogram of 4,4′-dichlorobenzophenone (DCBP) and 4′-Me-5′-MeSO2-CB106 (MSF-IS) recovery study of cod performed by on-column injection. a DCBP reference. b DCBP high dose (46 ng). c DCBP low dose (9.2 ng). CB201 spiked as volumetric standard
Fig. 5GC-ECD chromatogram of 4,4′-dichlorobenzophenone (DCBP) and 4,4′-dicofol (Dicofol) injected on a standard split/splitless injector. a DCBP reference. b Dicofol transformation to DCBP by potassium hydroxide treatment. c Dicofol reference. CB189 used as retention time standard
Summary of dicofol residue in environmental samples reported in the scientific literature
| Matrix | Extraction | Clean-up | Instrument | Target ions | Detection limit | Recovery | Residue level | Location | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apple | Liquid extraction | Column chromatography | GC-ECD | 5 ng/g | 93–96 | n.d. | India | (Singh et al. | |
| Mother’s milk | Liquid extraction | GPC, silica gel column | GC-MS | 139, 250 | 0.2 ng/g | 91 | 5.8–64 (9.6) ng/g l.w. | China | (Fujii et al. |
| Mother’s milk | Liquid extraction | GPC, silica gel column | GC-MS | 139, 250 | 0.2 ng/g | 91 | 0.8–3.0 (1.9) ng/g l.w. | Korea | (Fujii et al. |
| Mother’s milk | Liquid extraction | GPC, silica gel column | GC-MS | 139, 250 | 0.2 ng/g | 91 | <0.1–2.7 (0.32) ng/g l.w. | Japan | (Fujii et al., |
| Tea | Microwave-assisted steam distillation | SPE | GC-ECD | 0.2 ng/g | 81–110 | 53–990 ng/g | China | (Ji et al. | |
| Tomato | Liquid extraction | Florisil column | GC-ECD | 0.007 μg/g | 87 | 0.002–0.4 μg/g | Morocco | (Salghi et al. | |
| Human adipose tissue | Liquid extraction | GPC | GC-MS-MS | 250, 139 | 2.91 ng/g fat | China | (Wang et al. | ||
| Soil | Liquid extraction | GC-ECD | 1.85 ng/g | 84 | 11 ng/g | Pakistan | (Syed and Malik | ||
| Soil | Ultrasonic-extraction | Florisil column | GC-MS | 250, 139 | 1.35 ng/g | 11 ng/g | China | (Lv et al. | |
| Egg | Liquid extraction | Acid silica | GC-ECD | 6 ng/g | 70–98 | 29–36 ng/g | Pakistan | (Malik et al. | |
| Egg | Liquid extraction | Acid silica | GC-ECD | 6 ng/g | 70–98 | n.d.—21.6 ng/g | Pakistan | (Malik et al. |
Summary of method for dicofol analysis reported elsewhere
| Matrix | Extraction | Clean-up | Instrument | Parent ions | Detection limit | Recovery | Special technique | Spiked amount | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cod | Liquid extraction | Sulfuric acid basic aluminum column | GC-ECD | 0.01 ng/g l.w. | 56–81 | On-column injection | 1 and 10 ng | Present study | |
| Minced samples | Liquid extraction | MISPE | GC-ECD | 0.1 ng/g | 86–101 | Molecularly imprinted solid-phase extraction | 1–10 ng/g | (Wang et al. | |
| Water, milk, tomato, beans, grapes | UV-visible spectrophotometer | 94–99 | Spectrophotometric | 15–25 μg | (Pandey et al. | ||||
| Fish | Liquid extraction | NH2-SPE | GC-MS | 139 (250, 141) | 1 ng/g | 79–87 | 0.02–0.1 ng/g | (Chen et al. | |
| Orange | Silica gel | GC-ECD | 70 ng/g | 87–95 | 0.5–10 μg/g | (Ribeiro et al. | |||
| Tea | Liquid extraction | Dispersive solid phase extraction (d-SPE) | GC-MS UHPLC-MS-MS | 250, 252, 251, 254 | 0.09 μg/g | 107 | UHPLC-MS-MS | (Zhang et al. |