Determination of Residual Organic Solvents in Antitumor di-phenyl-di-(2,4-dichlorobenzohydroxamato)tin by Capillary Gas Chromatography

2012 ◽  
Vol 605-607 ◽  
pp. 1058-1062
Author(s):  
Lan Lan Miao ◽  
Yun E Li ◽  
Yun Lan Li ◽  
Qing Shan Li

Abstract. To determine the residual organic solvents(methanol, dichloromethane, normal hexane ) in antitumor crude drug di-phenyl-di-(2,4-dichlorobenzohydroxamato)tin(DPDCT), capillary gas chromatography (GC) method was established. The HP-5 (30m×320μm×0.25μm) capillary column and flame ionization detector (FID) detector were adopted. The carrier gas was nitrogen with flow rate 5.08 ml·min-1. The column temperature was 50.0°C and column pressure was 20.00psi. The distributary ratio was 20:1. 1, 2-dichloroethane was used as the internal standard substance while toluene as the solvent to determine the residual organic solvents. The calibration curves for methanol, dichloromethane and normal hexane are linear in the rang of 180.6~481.5μg·ml-1(r2 = 0.9974), 35.78~95.40μg·ml-1(r2 = 0.9950), 17.82~47.52μg·ml-1(r2 = 0.9995), respectively. The average recoveries of methanol, dichloromethane and normal hexane are 100.4 %( RSD=1.8%), 100.3 %( RSD=1.7%), 99.6 %( RSD=1.5%), respectively. The method is a simple and accurate method with high sensitivity and repeatability. It is suitable for the residual solvent determination of antitumor DPDCT.

1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 1672-1674 ◽  
Author(s):  
N B Smith

Abstract In this method for detection and quantification of volatile alcohols by capillary gas chromatography, the serum sample is deproteinized, then directly injected into the gas chromatograph with 1-propanol as the internal standard. The capillary column is a 30-m bonded methylsilicone-coated, fused-silica column. With helium as the carrier gas, the injector inlet is set at a split ratio of 1/30 and the average linear velocity in the column is 25 cm/s. Injector and flame-ionization detector temperatures are 280 degrees C, oven temperature 35 degrees C. Chromatography time is less than 3 min.


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 1225-1228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Angeliki Tsigouri ◽  
Urania Menkissoglu-Spiroudi ◽  
Andreas T Thrasyvoulou ◽  
Grigorios C Diamantidis

Abstract A simple, rapid, and accurate method is described for the determination of residual fluvalinate in beeswax. The procedure consists of partitioning on a disposable column of diatomaceous earth (Extrelut®), followed by chromatographic cleanup on a Florisil cartridge. The final extract is analyzed by capillary gas chromatography with electron-capture detection (GC–ECD). Briefly, wax samples were dissolved in n-hexane, and the solutions were sonicated and transferred to Extrelut columns. The fluvalinate was extracted with acetonitrile, and a portion of the extract was cleaned up on a Florisil cartridge. The fluvalinate was eluted with diethyl ether–n-hexane (1 + 1) and directly determined by GC–ECD. Recoveries from wax samples spiked at 5 fortification levels (100–1500 μg/kg) ranged from 77.4 to 87.3%, with coefficients of variation of 5.12–8.31%. The overall recovery of the method was 81.4 ± 3.2%, and the limit of determination was 100 μg/kg.


2016 ◽  
Vol 99 (1) ◽  
pp. 210-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre-Alain Golay ◽  
Julie Moulin ◽  
M Alewijn ◽  
U Braun ◽  
L F Choo ◽  
...  

Abstract A collaborative study was conducted on AOAC First Action Method 2012.13 “Determination of Labeled Fatty Acids Content in Milk Products and Infant Formula by Capillary Gas Chromatography,” which is based on an initial International Organization for Standardization (ISO)–International Dairy Federation (IDF) New Work Item that has been moved forward to ISO 16958:2015|IDF 231:2015 in November 2015. It was decided to merge the two activities after the agreement signed between ISO and AOAC in June 2012 to develop common standards and to avoid duplicate work. The collaborative study was performed after having provided highly satisfactory single-laboratory validation results [Golay, P.A., & Dong, Y. (2015) J. AOAC Int. 98, 1679–1696] that exceeded the performance criteria defined in AOAC Standard Method Performance Requirement (SMPR®) 2012.011 (September 29, 2012) on 12 products selected by the AOAC Stakeholder Panel on Infant Formula (SPIFAN). After a qualification period of 1 month, 18 laboratories participated in the fatty acids analysis of 12 different samples in duplicate. Six samples were selected to meet AOAC SPIFAN requirements (i.e., infant formula and adult nutritionals in powder and liquid formats), and the other Six samples were selected to meet ISO-IDF requirements (i.e., dairy products such as milk powder, liquid milk, cream, butter, infant formula with milk, and cheese). The fatty acids were analyzed directly in all samples without preliminary fat extraction, except in one sample (cheese). Powdered samples were analyzed after dissolution (i.e., reconstitution) in water, whereas liquid samples (or extracted fat) were analyzed directly. After addition of the internal standards solution [C11:0 fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) and C13:0 triacylglycerols (TAG)] to the samples, fatty acids attached to lipids were transformed into FAMEs by direct transesterification using methanolic sodium methoxide. FAMEs were separated using highly polar capillary GLC and were identified by comparison with the retention times of pure analytical standards. Quantification of fatty acids was done relative to C11:0 FAME as internal standard and to instrument response factors (determined separately using calibration standards mixture). The performance of the method (i.e., transesterification) was monitored in all samples using the second internal standard, C13:0 TAG. RSDR values were summarized separately for labeled fatty acids in SPIFAN materials and ISO-IDF materials due to different expression of results. This method was applied to representative dairy, infant formula, and adult/pediatric nutritional products and demonstrated global acceptable reproducibility precision for all fatty acids analyzed (i.e., 46 individuals and/or groups) for these categories of products.


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