| Literature DB >> 34898195 |
Achille Cappiello1,2, Veronica Termopoli1, Pierangela Palma1,2, Giorgio Famiglini1, Mansoor Saeed3, Simon Perry3, Pablo Navarro3.
Abstract
Negative chemical ionization (NCI) and electron-capture negative ionization (ECNI) are gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) techniques that generate negative ions in the gas phase for compounds containing electronegative atoms or functional groups. In ECNI, gas-phase thermal electrons can be transferred to electrophilic substances to produce M-• ions and scarce fragmentation. As a result of the electrophilicity requirements, ECNI is characterized by high-specificity and low background noise, generally lower than EI, offering lower detection limits. The aim of this work is to explore the possibility of extending typical advantages of ECNI to liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS). The LC is combined with the novel liquid-EI (LEI) LC-EIMS interface, the eluent is vaporized and transferred inside a CI source, where it is mixed with methane as a buffer gas. As proof of concept, dicamba and tefluthrin, agrochemicals with herbicidal and insecticidal activity, respectively, were chosen as model compounds and detected together in a commercial formulation. The pesticides have different chemical properties, but both are suitable analytes for ECNI due to the presence of electronegative atoms in the molecules. The influence of the mobile phase and other LC- and MS-operative parameters were methodically evaluated. Part-per-trillion (ppt) detection limits were obtained. Ion abundances were found to be stable with quantitative linear detection, reliable, and reproducible, with no influence from coeluting interfering compounds from the sample matrix.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34898195 PMCID: PMC8739837 DOI: 10.1021/jasms.1c00307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Soc Mass Spectrom ISSN: 1044-0305 Impact factor: 3.109
Figure 1Full-scan spectra of (a) dicamba and (b) tefluthrin in LC–LEI–MS in ECNI mode.
Figure 2Integrated peak area values of dicamba Q transitions at different VMC temperatures and mobile-phase compositions.
Figure 3Integrated peak area values of tefluthrin Q transitions at different VMC temperatures and mobile-phase compositions.
Figure 4Influence of different methane percentages on Q transitions on integrated peak areas values of the two pesticides.
Calibration Data, Detection and Quantification Limits, and Matrix Effects in Solvent and Diluted CF
| compd | LOD (ng/mL) | LOQ (ng/mL) | linearity range (ng/mL) | equation in solvent | equation in CF | ME (%) (slope CF/slope standard) × 100 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| dicamba | 0.08 | 0.3 | 0.5–100 | 0.9987 | 0.9978 | 103 | ||
| tefluthrin | 0.05 | 0.2 | 0.5–100 | 0.9999 | 0.9974 | 102 |
Figure 5Q transition of dicamba in diluted CF at 5 ng/mL with LC–LEI–MS/MS in (a) EI and (b) in ECNI.
Applications Involving the Analysis of Dicamba and Tefluthrin in Different Matrices
| compd | matrix | preparation method | detection mode | LOD | LOQ | ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| raw agricultural commodities | milling/high-speed agitation | LC–ESI–MS/MS | 0.3 μg/kg | 1.0 μg/kg | ( | |
| dicamba | food | modified QuEChERS | LC–ESI–MS/MS | 0.001 mg/kg | ( | |
| groundwater | SPE | LC–ESI–MS/MS | 0.0003 μg/L | 0.0004 μg/L | ( | |
| tobacco | QuEChERS | UPLC–ESI–MS/MS | 0.117 ng/g | 0.390 ng/g | ( | |
| soil | 0.126 ng/g | 0.420 ng/g | ||||
| commercial formulation | dilution/filtration | LC–LEI–NCI–MS/MS | 0.08 ng/mL | 0.3 ng/mL | this work | |
| tefluthrin | food | vortex/filtration | GC–NCI–MS | 0.02–0.06 μg/kg | 0.08–0.2 μg/kg | ( |
| water | DLLME | LC–ESI–MS/MS | 0.62 μg/L | 0.75 μg/L | ( | |
| sediment | 2.5 ng/g | 7.50 ng/g | ||||
| food | homogenization/agitation/centrifugation | GC–NCI–QTOF | 0.5 μg/kg | 5 μg/kg | ( | |
| food | homogenization/blending/homogenization | GC–NCI–MS | 1 μg/kg | ( | ||
| commercial formulation | dilution/filtration | LC–LEI–NCI–MS/MS | 0.05 ng/mL | 0.2 ng/mL | this work |
Figure 6Calibration curves of a two-compound mixture in 70:30 water/MeOH (v/v) with PA 0.2% and in diluted CF: (a) purple dots, dicamba in solvent; green dots dicamba in diluted CF; (b) yellow dots, tefluthrin in solvent; green dots, tefluthrin in diluted CF.