The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes

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The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes. / Fathalinejad, Samin; Taarning, Esben; Christensen, Peter; Christensen, Jan H.

I: Analytical Methods, Bind 12, Nr. 15, 2020, s. 1975-1987.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Fathalinejad, S, Taarning, E, Christensen, P & Christensen, JH 2020, 'The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes', Analytical Methods, bind 12, nr. 15, s. 1975-1987. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9ay02639h

APA

Fathalinejad, S., Taarning, E., Christensen, P., & Christensen, J. H. (2020). The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes. Analytical Methods, 12(15), 1975-1987. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9ay02639h

Vancouver

Fathalinejad S, Taarning E, Christensen P, Christensen JH. The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes. Analytical Methods. 2020;12(15):1975-1987. https://doi.org/10.1039/c9ay02639h

Author

Fathalinejad, Samin ; Taarning, Esben ; Christensen, Peter ; Christensen, Jan H. / The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes. I: Analytical Methods. 2020 ; Bind 12, Nr. 15. s. 1975-1987.

Bibtex

@article{3c75d6d6de1643fd9e48282f0e69e6c8,
title = "The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes",
abstract = "Glycolaldehyde is a small sugar-like molecule that is readily formed by the thermochemical fragmentation of carbohydrates and it has similar physico-chemical properties to sugars. Current methods for the analysis of glycolaldehyde comprise low-selective and time-consuming chromatographic or spectroscopic techniques, such as high-performance liquid chromatography, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a quick method for quantifying glycolaldehyde in aqueous solutions using liquid injection gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Various chromatographic parameters were optimized to obtain a baseline separation of glycolaldehyde from other polar matrix components in the mixture, as well as achieving a high peak symmetry, low band broadness and high resolution. The final gas chromatographic method consists of: a hundred-fold dilution of the sample in acetonitrile, an initial oven temperature of 80 °C, a mobile phase flow rate of 2 ml min-1, a split ratio of 50:1, a thermal gradient of 60 °C min-1, a final temperature of 220 °C, an injection volume of 1 μl, and the use of free-fatty acid polyethylene glycol as the capillary stationary phase. The GA concentrations were determined through internal, external, standard addition, and internal-standard-corrected standard addition calibration curves. The developed method is rapid (5.3 min), accurate (>90%), and precise (intra-day, inter-day and inter-laboratory precisions are all <4% relative standard deviation), with a limit of detection and a limit of quantification of 0.104 and 0.315 g L-1, respectively. This method can be further optimized for the analysis of other carbohydrate-related mixtures in aqueous solutions for both quantification and identification purposes.",
author = "Samin Fathalinejad and Esben Taarning and Peter Christensen and Christensen, {Jan H.}",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.1039/c9ay02639h",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
pages = "1975--1987",
journal = "Analytical Methods",
issn = "1759-9660",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",
number = "15",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The development and validation of a GC-MS method for the quantification of glycolaldehyde formed from carbohydrate fragmentation processes

AU - Fathalinejad, Samin

AU - Taarning, Esben

AU - Christensen, Peter

AU - Christensen, Jan H.

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - Glycolaldehyde is a small sugar-like molecule that is readily formed by the thermochemical fragmentation of carbohydrates and it has similar physico-chemical properties to sugars. Current methods for the analysis of glycolaldehyde comprise low-selective and time-consuming chromatographic or spectroscopic techniques, such as high-performance liquid chromatography, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a quick method for quantifying glycolaldehyde in aqueous solutions using liquid injection gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Various chromatographic parameters were optimized to obtain a baseline separation of glycolaldehyde from other polar matrix components in the mixture, as well as achieving a high peak symmetry, low band broadness and high resolution. The final gas chromatographic method consists of: a hundred-fold dilution of the sample in acetonitrile, an initial oven temperature of 80 °C, a mobile phase flow rate of 2 ml min-1, a split ratio of 50:1, a thermal gradient of 60 °C min-1, a final temperature of 220 °C, an injection volume of 1 μl, and the use of free-fatty acid polyethylene glycol as the capillary stationary phase. The GA concentrations were determined through internal, external, standard addition, and internal-standard-corrected standard addition calibration curves. The developed method is rapid (5.3 min), accurate (>90%), and precise (intra-day, inter-day and inter-laboratory precisions are all <4% relative standard deviation), with a limit of detection and a limit of quantification of 0.104 and 0.315 g L-1, respectively. This method can be further optimized for the analysis of other carbohydrate-related mixtures in aqueous solutions for both quantification and identification purposes.

AB - Glycolaldehyde is a small sugar-like molecule that is readily formed by the thermochemical fragmentation of carbohydrates and it has similar physico-chemical properties to sugars. Current methods for the analysis of glycolaldehyde comprise low-selective and time-consuming chromatographic or spectroscopic techniques, such as high-performance liquid chromatography, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. The aim of this study was to develop and validate a quick method for quantifying glycolaldehyde in aqueous solutions using liquid injection gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Various chromatographic parameters were optimized to obtain a baseline separation of glycolaldehyde from other polar matrix components in the mixture, as well as achieving a high peak symmetry, low band broadness and high resolution. The final gas chromatographic method consists of: a hundred-fold dilution of the sample in acetonitrile, an initial oven temperature of 80 °C, a mobile phase flow rate of 2 ml min-1, a split ratio of 50:1, a thermal gradient of 60 °C min-1, a final temperature of 220 °C, an injection volume of 1 μl, and the use of free-fatty acid polyethylene glycol as the capillary stationary phase. The GA concentrations were determined through internal, external, standard addition, and internal-standard-corrected standard addition calibration curves. The developed method is rapid (5.3 min), accurate (>90%), and precise (intra-day, inter-day and inter-laboratory precisions are all <4% relative standard deviation), with a limit of detection and a limit of quantification of 0.104 and 0.315 g L-1, respectively. This method can be further optimized for the analysis of other carbohydrate-related mixtures in aqueous solutions for both quantification and identification purposes.

U2 - 10.1039/c9ay02639h

DO - 10.1039/c9ay02639h

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85083549431

VL - 12

SP - 1975

EP - 1987

JO - Analytical Methods

JF - Analytical Methods

SN - 1759-9660

IS - 15

ER -

ID: 242576025