Dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction and injection-port derivatization for the determination of free lipophilic compounds in fruit juices by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry

Author

Marsol i Vall, Alexis

Balcells Fluvià, Mercè

Eras i Joli, Jordi

Canela i Garayoa, Ramon

Publication date

2017-05-30T10:25:12Z

2019-03-19T23:27:08Z

2017



Abstract

A method consisting of dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction (DLLME) followed by injection-port derivatization and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC–MS) for the analysis of free lipophilic compounds in fruit juices is described. The method allows the analysis of several classes of lipophilic compounds, such as fatty acids, fatty alcohols, phytosterols and triterpenes. The chromatographic separation of the compounds was achieved in a chromatographic run of 25.5 min. The best conditions for the dispersive liquid–liquid microextraction were 100 μL of CHCl3 in 1 mL of acetone. For the injection-port derivatization, the best conditions were at 280 °C, 1 min purge-off, and a 1:1 sample:derivatization reagent ratio (v/v) using N-methyl-N-(trimethylsilyl)trifluoroacetamide (MSTFA):pyridine (1:1) as reagent. Quality parameters were assessed for the target compounds, giving a limits of detection (LODs) ranging from 1.1 to 5.7 ng/mL and limits of quantification (LOQs) from 3.4 to 18.7 ng/mL for linoleic and stearic acid, respectively. Repeatability (%RSD, n = 5) was below 11.51% in all cases. In addition, the method linearity presented an r2 ≥0.990 for all ranges applied. Finally, the method was used to test the lipophilic fraction of various samples of commercial fruit juice.

Document Type

article
acceptedVersion

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

DLLME; Injection-port derivatization; GC–MS; Free lipophilic fraction; Fruit juices

Publisher

Elsevier

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chroma.2017.03.027

Journal of Chromatography A, 2017, vol. 1495, April 2017, Pages 12–21

Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Elsevier, 2017

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

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