A multi-residue method is described that eliminates the need for a clean-up step and thus allows the rapid determination of pesticides in crude extracts of lettuce. Samples were extracted with a mixture of ethyl acetate, Na2SO4 and NaHCO3 and the crude extracts analysed directly using large volume-difficult matrix introduction (LV-DMI) in combination with gas chromatography-time of flight-mass spectrometry (GC-TOF-MS). The LV-DMI procedure described was evaluated for the analysis of dimethoate, pyrimethanil, chlorothalonil, vinclozolin, furalaxyl and oxadixyl. Satisfactory response was obtained at the lowest calibrated level (LCL) of 0.0025 microg ml(-1), with good linearity over the range 0.0025-0.5 microg ml(-1) (0.005-1.0 mg kg(-1) equivalent). Average recoveries between 73 and 118% were obtained at the 0.01-0.5 mg kg(-1) levels with RSD values < or = 13%.
The European Union Baby Food Directive (1999/39/EC), which came into force on 1 July 2002, set legal maximum residue levels at 0.01 mg kg(-1) for all pesticides in baby foods. The combination of large volume-difficult matrix introduction (LV-DMI) with gas chromatography-time of flight-mass spectrometry (GC-TOF-MS), described herein, provides the analyst with a simple but rapid alternative GC-MS technique for the multiresidue analysis of pesticides in fruit-based baby foods. Samples were extracted with ethyl acetate in the presence of Na2SO4 and NaHCO3 and the crude extracts were analysed directly using LV-DMI-GC-TOF-MS. The best overall results (98 pesticides quantified satisfactorily at a spiking level of 0.01 mg kg(-1)) were obtained by analysis of concentrated extracts (2.5 g crop ml(-1)) using a 30-m column, with a chromatographic run time of 25 min. A good signal-to-noise ratio was obtained at the lowest calibrated level (0.0125 microg ml(-1)), with excellent linearity achieved over the range 0.0125-0.25 microg ml(-1) (equivalent to 0.005-0.1 mg kg(-1)). Average recoveries for the analysis of five replicate determinations at a spiking level of 0.01 mg kg(-1) were between 79 and 114% with relative standard derivations generally less than 20%.
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