| Literature DB >> 29438289 |
Nathan Eddingsaas1, Todd Pagano2, Cody Cummings3, Irfan Rahman4, Risa Robinson5, Edward Hensel6.
Abstract
This work investigates emissions sampling methods employed for qualitative identification of compounds in e-liquids and their resultant aerosols to assess what capture methods may be sufficient to identify harmful and potentially harmful constituents present. Three popular e-liquid flavors (cinnamon, mango, vanilla) were analyzed using qualitative gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) in the un-puffed state. Each liquid was also machine-puffed under realistic-use flow rate conditions and emissions were captured using two techniques: filter pads and methanol impingers. GC-MS analysis was conducted on the emissions captured using both techniques from all three e-liquids. The e-liquid GC-MS analysis resulted in positive identification of 13 compounds from the cinnamon flavor e-liquid, 31 from mango, and 19 from vanilla, including a number of compounds observed in all e-liquid experiments. Nineteen compounds were observed in emissions which were not present in the un-puffed e-liquid. Qualitative GC-MS analysis of the emissions samples identify compounds observed in all three samples: e-liquid, impinge, and filter pads, and each subset thereof. A limited number of compounds were observed in emissions captured with impingers, but were not observed in emissions captured using filter pads; a larger number of compounds were observed on emissions collected from the filter pads, but not those captured with impingers. It is demonstrated that sampling methods have different sampling efficiencies and some compounds might be missed using only one method. It is recommended to investigate filter pads, impingers, thermal desorption tubes, and solvent extraction resins to establish robust sampling methods for emissions testing of e-cigarette emissions.Entities:
Keywords: e-liquid; electronic cigarettes; emissions; flavor; harmful and potentially harmful constituents; regulatory science; tobacco product characteristics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29438289 PMCID: PMC5858392 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15020323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
GC-MS operating parameters used for the qualitative emissions analysis results presented herein.
| GC-MS Setting | Optimized Method |
|---|---|
| Capillary Column (GC) | DB-17MS ((50%-Phenyl)-methylpolysiloxane) |
| Helium Flowrate (GC) | 1.00 mL/min |
| Oven Program (GC) | Ramp 1: 40 °C to 170 °C @ 10 °C/min; hold 2 min; Ramp 2: 8 °C/min to 250 °C; Ramp 3: 25 °C/min to 320 °C; hold 5 min. |
| Split Ratio Mode (GC) | 25:1 |
| Solvent Delay (MS) | 0 to 1.00 min |
| Total Ion Scan (MS) | m/z = (30–450) from 1 min to 32.80 min |
Figure 1Gas chromatogram (GC) analysis of aerosol emissions resulting from vanilla flavored e-liquid using alternative captured methods. Emissions were collected from 100 puffs under realistic topography conditions. Chromatograms reflect (A) e-liquid diluted in methanol, and emissions collected: (B) with series impinger 1; and (C) on 10 Cambridge pads, with 10 puffs per pad.
GC-MS analysis of molecules in observed in aerosols generated from 100 puffs of vanilla flavor e-liquid, in emissions captured with pads, and methanol impingers.
| Peak Number | Compound | Retention Index | Retention Time | Library Match | E-Liquid | Impinger | Filter Pad |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Propylene glycol | 724 | 3.8 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| 1,2-Propanediol, 2-acetate | 864 | 5.8 | 97 | X | X | ||
| Glycerol | 967 | 8.5 | 98 | X | X | X | |
| Glyceryl 1-monoacetate * | 1091 | 9.74 | 96 | X | X | ||
| Glyceryl 1-monoacetate * | 1091 | 10.45 | 93 | X | X | ||
| Ethyl maltol | 1163 | 11.27 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Nicotine | 1341 | 13.03 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Dodecanol | 1457 | 13.63 | 95 | X | |||
| Piperonal | 1326 | 13.95 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Decyl acetate | 1381 | 14.83 | 96 | X | |||
| Vanillin | 1392 | 15.13 | 96 | X | X | X | |
| Diethyl phthalate | 1639 | 17.97 | 96 | X | X | X | |
| Lauryl acetate | 1580 | 18.05 | 92 | X | |||
| Piperonal propylene glycol acetal | 1617 | 18.92 | 95 | X | X | X | |
| Methyl hexadecanoate | 1878 | 19.82 | 95 | X | |||
| Methyl stearate | 2077 | 22.4 | 96 | X | |||
| Butyl hexadecanoate | 2177 | 22.99 | 96 | X | X | X | |
| Butyl octadecanoate | 25.17 | 93 | X |
* Note: Compounds 4 and 5 are identified as the same compound but there are many isomers that are very similar that show strong mass spectra correlation. Please see text for further information.
Figure 2Gas chromatogram (GC) analysis of aerosol emissions resulting from mango flavored e-liquid using alternative captured methods. Emissions were collected from 100 puffs under realistic topography conditions. Chromatograms reflect (A) e-liquid diluted in methanol, and emissions collected: (B) with series impinger 1; and (C) on 10 Cambridge pads, with 10 puffs per pad.
GC-MS analysis of molecules in observed in aerosols generated from 100 puffs of mango flavor e-liquid, in emissions captured with pads, and two series impingers.
| Peak Number | Compound | Retention Index | Retention Time | Library Match | E-Liquid | Impinger | Filter Pad |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Propylene Glycol | 724 | 3.8 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| 1-hexanol | 860 | 4.57 | 98 | X | X | ||
| Methyl hexanoate | 884 | 5.43 | 95 | X | |||
| 1,2-propanediol, 2-acetate | 864 | 5.6 | 87 | X | X | ||
| 1,2-propanediol, 2-acetate | 864 | 5.82 | 96 | X | |||
| Hexyl acetate | 984 | 6.65 | 96 | X | |||
| Methyl heptanoate | 984 | 6.87 | 94 | X | |||
| Glycerol | 967 | 8.5 | 98 | X | X | X | |
| Hexyl butanoate | 1183 | 9.21 | 96 | X | |||
| Citronellol | 1179 | 10.06 | 96 | X | X | ||
| Glyceryl 1-monoacetate | 1091 | 10.45 | 93 | X | |||
| Hexyl hexanoate | 1381 | 11.83 | 97 | X | X | ||
| Glycerol 1,2-diacetate | 1230 | 11.9 | 93 | X | |||
| Nicotine | 1341 | 13.04 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Piperonal | 1326 | 13.91 | 97 | X | |||
| γ-Decalactone | 1383 | 15.1 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| δ-Decalactone | 1404 | 15.98 | 98 | X | X | X | |
| γ-Undecalactone | 1582 | 16.85 | 96 | X | X | X | |
| τ-Cadinol | 1580 | 16.93 | 88 | X | |||
| α-Cadinol | 1580 | 17.02 | 88 | X | |||
| 1-Naphthalenol | 1580 | 17.17 | 92 | X | |||
| Diethyl phthalate | 1639 | 17.95 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Cadalene | 1706 | 18.36 | 95 | X | |||
| Hexadecanal | 1800 | 18.4 | 93 | X | |||
| Methyl hexadecanoate | 1878 | 19.8 | 96 | X | |||
| octadecanal | 1999 | 21.2 | 95 | X | |||
| Methyl stearate | 2077 | 22.4 | 96 | X | X | ||
| Butyl Hexadecanoate | 2177 | 22.99 | 94 | X | X | ||
| Butyl octadecanoate | 2375 | 25.18 | 93 | X | X | ||
| 9-octadecanamide | 2228 | 26.55 | 91 | X |
Figure 3Gas chromatogram (GC) analysis of aerosol emissions resulting from cinnamon flavored e-liquid using alternative captured methods. Emissions were collected from 100 puffs under realistic topography conditions. Chromatograms reflect (A) E-liquid diluted in methanol, and emissions collected: (B) with series impinger 1; and (C) on 10 Cambridge pads, with 10 puffs per pad.
GC-MS analysis of molecules in observed in aerosols generated from 100 puffs of cinnamon flavor e-liquid, in emissions captured with pads, and two series impingers.
| Peak Number | Compound | Retention Index | Retention Time | Library Match | E-Liquid | Impinger | Filter Pad |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Propylene Glycol | 724 | 3.8 | 98 | X | X | X | |
| 1-(2-methoxy-1-methylethoxy)propane-2-ol | 967 | 6.96 | 98 | X | |||
| Glycerol | 967 | 8.5 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Cinnamaldehyde | 1189 | 12.64 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Nicotine | 1341 | 13.03 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Ethyl Vanillin | 1491 | 15.6 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Diethyl phthalate | 1639 | 17.9 | 97 | X | X | X | |
| Methyl hexadecanoate | 1878 | 19.8 | 96 | X | |||
| Methyl sterate | 2077 | 22.37 | 96 | X | |||
| Tetracosyl acetate | 2773 | 23.28 | 95 | X | |||
| Tributyl prop-1-ene-1,2,3-tricarboxylate | 2297 | 24.3 | 93 | X | |||
| Butyl octadecanoate | 2375 | 25.18 | 93 | X | |||
| Tributyl acetylcitrate | 2594 | 25.52 | 92 | X |
Compounds observed in e-liquid, impinger, and filter pads.
| Compound | Flavor |
|---|---|
| Propylene Glycol | All |
| Glycerol | All |
| Ethyl maltol | Vanilla |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Cinnamon |
| Nicotine | All |
| γ-Decalactone | Mango |
| Vanillin | Vanilla |
| Ethyl Vanillin | Vanilla |
| δ-Decalactone | Mango |
| γ-Undecalactone | Mango |
| Diethyl phthalate | All |
| Piperonal propylene glycol acetal | Vanilla |
| Butyl hexadecanoate | Vanilla |
Compounds observed in e-liquid and impinger.
| Compound | Flavor |
|---|---|
| 1,2-propanediol, 2-acetate | All |
| Glyceryl 1-monoacetate | Vanilla, Mango |
Compounds observed in e-liquid and filter pads.
| Compound | Flavor |
|---|---|
| Citronellol | Mango |
| Hexyl hexanoate | Mango |
| Butyl hexadecanoate | Mango |
Compounds observed only in the impinger.
| Compound | Flavor |
|---|---|
| Glyceryl 1-monoacetate | Mango |
| Tributyl prop-1-ene-1,2,3-tricarboxylate | Cinnamon |
| Tributyl acetylcitrate | Cinnamon |
Compounds observed only in the filter pads.
| Compound | Flavor |
|---|---|
| Methyl hexanoate | Mango |
| Methyl heptanoate | Mango |
| 1-(2-methoxy-1-methylethoxy)propane-2-ol | Cinnamon |
| Dodecanol | Vanilla, Mango |
| Decyl acetate | Vanilla, Mango |
| τ-Cadinol | Mango |
| α-Cadinol | Mango |
| 1-Naphthalenol | Mango |
| Lauryl acetate | Vanilla |
| Cadalene | Mango |
| Hexadecanal | Mango |
| Methyl hexadecanoate | Cinnamon |
| Octadecanal | Mango |
| Methyl stearate | Vanilla, Cinnamon |
| 9-octadecanamide | Mango |