Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1198547 Journal of Chromatography A 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Migrant identification from new polyester food cans coatings.•Conventional techniques: GC–MS, HPLC-DAD/MS, HPLC-DAD/CAD and UHPL CHRMS. Expensive and long analytical methods (Days).•DART-HRMS. Similar results were obtained by direct analysis of the coating (Minutes).•Identified substances are being used to monitor the migration from polyester can coatings into food and food simulants.

Cross-linked polyester resins are being introduced into the market as alternatives to epoxy resins as coatings for metal food cans. Identification of potential migrants, from these coatings into food, is a significant analytical challenge due to the diversity of substances employed in the manufacture of the coatings. However, such identification is required to assess migration from the can coating into the food and quantify dietary exposure. Polyester can coatings were extracted with acetonitrile at 40 °C for 24 h and the extracts were analyzed by a variety of analytical techniques, including GC–MS, HPLC-DAD/MS, HPLC-DAD/CAD and UHPL C-HRMS. Twenty nine non-volatile oligomers were tentatively identified using retention times, UV spectra, and accurate mass measurements. Identified oligomers suggest the coating in use for food cans is a polyester coating and is mainly based on the monomers isophthalic acid, terephthalic acid and nadic acid. To give confidence in the identification, one of the tentatively identified oligomer was synthetized and analyzed by 13C and 1H NMR and UHPL C-HRMS. The NMR and HRMS results, confirmed the presence of this compound in the can extracts. Finally, to determine if rapid, direct detection of the oligomers was practical, the coatings were analyzed by DART-HRMS. Twenty three out of the 29 oligomers were identified in the coating by direct measurement with DART-HRMS in few minutes.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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