6 results on '"Ramos, María del Mar"'
Search Results
2. Supercritical fluid chromatography separation of chiral pesticides: Unique capabilities to study cyhalothrin and metalaxyl as examples.
- Author
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Cutillas V, García-Valverde M, Gómez-Ramos MDM, Díaz-Galiano FJ, Ferrer C, and Fernández-Alba AR
- Subjects
- Alanine analysis, Alanine chemistry, Nitriles chemistry, Pesticides chemistry, Polysaccharides chemistry, Pyrethrins chemistry, Reproducibility of Results, Stereoisomerism, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Alanine analogs & derivatives, Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid methods, Nitriles analysis, Pesticides analysis, Pyrethrins analysis
- Abstract
Evaluation of chiral pesticides remains a frequently neglected matter in routine food control laboratories. This fact is due to the existence of many residue definitions but also due to the lack of robust instrumental methods for the evaluation of these isomeric compounds. However, supercritical fluid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (SFC-ESI-MS/MS) has been demonstrated to perform fast and highly efficient separations without the need to change the mobile phase employed in multiresidue pesticide analyses. Regarding chiral stationary phase columns, the polysaccharide-based ones clearly demonstrate the best separation technology. Two polysaccharide-based columns were tested in this study, and the robustness of their combination with SFC was verified. The enantiomers of lambda-cyhalothrin and metalaxyl were studied precisely due to their markedly distinct toxicity and enantioselectivity. Furthermore, the acute reference dose for gamma-cyhalothrin is half in comparison with its enantiomer (0.0025 and 0.005 mg/kg respectively), which is present in the lambda-cyhalothin residue definition. These enantiomers were analyzed in terms of linearity, reproducibility, and matrix effects in four representative matrices (tomato, orange, leek, and cayenne). Additionally, field tests under greenhouse conditions for these compounds were performed. The results obtained after different sample collections revealed a similar degradation in lambda-cyhalothrin enantiomers (R, S, S, and S, R, R) but not in the case of metalaxyl-M (mefenoxam) where the degradation in tomato was 2 to 6 times less in comparison with its S-enantiomer., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Supercritical fluid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry for the analysis of pesticide residues in dried spices. Benefits and drawbacks.
- Author
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Cutillas V, Murcia-Morales M, Gómez-Ramos MDM, Taha SM, and Fernández-Alba AR
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Supercritical Fluid methods, Magnoliopsida chemistry, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods, Food Contamination analysis, Pesticide Residues analysis, Spices analysis
- Abstract
This study describes the high sensitivity and the reduced ion suppression and matrix effect that can be achieved by supercritical fluid chromatography (SFC) in the analysis of dried spices as complex matrices. Samples selected for the evaluation were cayenne and black pepper, which are representative of complex dried spices. To carry out the evaluation of this technique, blank samples were fortified with a solution containing 162 pesticides at two concentration levels (50 and 200 μg kg
-1 ). During the modified QuEChERS method, EMR sorbent was used as dispersive SPE in the clean-up step. The samples were analysed by supercritical fluid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. The validation parameters studied were recovery, inter and intraday precision, linearity and matrix effect. Recoveries for the majority of compounds were in the 70-120% range recommended by DG-SANTE guidelines and showed a precision lower than 20% in terms of RSD. Matrix effect was low (0-20% signal suppression) for 132 pesticides in cayenne and 91 in black pepper. The method was used to analyse 47 real samples of spices from different countries. A high number of these samples presented one or more pesticides (81%). Some of these detected pesticides are not approved in the European Union and, in many cases, the positive findings exposed concentrations that exceed the EU MRLs., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Large pesticide multiresidue screening method by liquid chromatography-Orbitrap mass spectrometry in full scan mode applied to fruit and vegetables.
- Author
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Rajski Ł, Gómez-Ramos Mdel M, and Fernández-Alba AR
- Subjects
- Ions chemistry, Pesticide Residues chemistry, Reproducibility of Results, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid methods, Fruit chemistry, Mass Spectrometry methods, Pesticide Residues isolation & purification, Vegetables chemistry
- Abstract
The present work is focused on evaluating the main operational parameters for multiresidue screening of an Orbitrap mass spectrometer for pesticide residue analysis in fruits and vegetables. Operational parameters such as resolution, software for the automatic detection, mass tolerance and retention time extraction window, along with the analytical performance, were evaluated in an updated UHPLC-Orbitrap-mass spectrometer working in full scan mode. The evaluation was performed using QuEChERS extracts of tomato, pepper, orange and green tea. The extracts were spiked with 170 selected pesticides at four concentration levels (10μg/kg, 50μg/kg, 100μg/kg and 500μg/kg). Extracts were diluted 5 fold before injection. Three different resolution settings (17,500, 35,000 and 70,000) were evaluated at various concentration levels. At 10μg/kg, using a resolution of 17,500 and 5ppm of mass tolerance, the detected pesticide rates were from 91% in tomato, to 83% in green tea. These percentages increased at higher resolution values. A resolution of 70,000 was adequate for such analysis even when a small percentage of false detect at low concentration was obtained. The rates of detected compounds increased and were from 98% in tomato to 88% in green tea. Mass tolerance of 5ppm was the most adequate for screening purposes. The observed false negative detects were mainly a consequence of a lack of compound sensitivity exacerbated by ion suppression effects in the experimental conditions applied. With reporting limits of 10μg/kg, reproducibility improved with resolution levels of 35,000 or higher. Linearity was investigated in the 2-100ng/mL (equivalent to 10-500μg/kg in the sample) range. Particularly good automatic screening effectiveness was obtained using the selected settings in the analysis of real samples where no false negatives detects and 5% of false positives detects were obtained., (Copyright © 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Use of an accurate-mass database for the systematic identification of transformation products of organic contaminants in wastewater effluents.
- Author
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Gómez-Ramos Mdel M, Pérez-Parada A, García-Reyes JF, Fernández-Alba AR, and Agüera A
- Subjects
- Chromatography, Liquid, Diazinon analysis, Pharmaceutical Preparations analysis, Sewage, Water Pollutants, Chemical analysis, Database Management Systems, Diazinon chemistry, Pharmaceutical Preparations chemistry, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods, Water Pollutants, Chemical chemistry
- Abstract
In this article, a systematic approach is proposed to assist and simplify the identification of transformation products (TPs) of organic contaminants. This approach is based on the use of characteristic fragmentation undergone by organic contaminants during MS/MS fragmentation events, and the relationship and consistency with the transformations experimented by these chemicals in the environment or during water treatment processes. With this in mind, a database containing accurate-mass information of 147 compounds and their main fragments generated by CID MS/MS fragmentation experiments was created using an LC-QTOF-MS/MS system. The developed database was applied to the identification of tentative TPs and related unexpected compounds in eight wastewater effluent samples. The approach comprises basically three stages: (a) automatic screening, (b) identification of possible TPs and (c) confirmation by MS/MS analysis. Parameters related to the search of compounds in the database have been optimized and their dependence with the exhaustiveness of the study evaluated. Eight degradation products, from the pharmaceuticals acetaminophen, amoxicillin, carbamazepine, erythromycin and azithromycin and from the pesticide diazinon, were identified with a high grade of accuracy. Three of them were confirmed by analysis of the corresponding analytical standards., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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6. Chemical and toxicological evolution of the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole under ozone treatment in water solution.
- Author
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Gómez-Ramos Mdel M, Mezcua M, Agüera A, Fernández-Alba AR, Gonzalo S, Rodríguez A, and Rosal R
- Subjects
- Animals, Chromatography, Liquid, Kinetics, Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Water chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents chemistry, Anti-Bacterial Agents toxicity, Daphnia drug effects, Ozone chemistry, Sulfamethoxazole chemistry, Sulfamethoxazole toxicity
- Abstract
This work studied the elimination paths of the sulfonamide antibiotic sulfamethoxazole by ozonation in fast kinetic regime. The ozonation runs were performed in conditions favouring either the direct attack of the ozone molecule or the indirect attack by ozone-generated radical species with initial concentration of 0.150 mM. When doses of ozone were transferred to the liquid phase 0.2mM, in no case did sulfamethoxazole remain in solution. Two main transformation pathways were found involving the preferential attack of molecular ozone or radical pathway and leading to the formation of six intermediates, which were identified by LC-ESI-QTOF-MS. Both routes took place simultaneously in the different conditions tested, leading to a hydroxylation reaction of the benzene ring, oxidation of the amino group on the benzene ring, oxidation of the methyl group and the double bond in the isoxazole ring and S-N bond cleavage. The most abundant reaction intermediate was that resulting from S-N bond cleavage. The toxicity of partially ozonated samples for Daphnia magna and Pseudokirchneriella subcapitata revealed the formation of toxic by-products during the early stages of reaction and the persistence of considerable toxicity after the total depletion of sulfamethoxazole., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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