Determination of mineral oil paraffins in foods by on-line HPLC-GC-FID: lowered detection limit; contamination of sunflower seeds and oils
2009
Fiselier, Katell | Grob, Koni
A method is described to lower the detection limit for mineral oil saturated hydrocarbons (MOSH) in foods as compared to the on-line HPLC-LC-GC-FID method described previously: samples are preseparated (enriched) by conventional liquid chromatography on activated silica gel and activated aluminum oxide. The silica gel retains up to 1 g of fat or oil, the aluminum oxide up to 2 mg n-alkanes of at least 24 carbon atoms, i.e. plant paraffins which may severely hinder the analysis of the mineral paraffins. The efficacy of the method is shown for an apple and sunflower oil. Oils extracted from manually harvested seeds grown in fields or gardens contained between 0.14 and 0.77 mg/kg MOSH. In the oils from seeds sampled in an oil mill, this value was increased to 3.3-9.3 mg/kg, indicating a contamination during harvest, transport and/or storage. Concentrations in commercial refined sunflower oils ranged between 2.7 and 32 mg/kg, averaging 11.2 mg/kg. Since deodorization removes a substantial part of the MOSH, this suggests a further contamination in the oil mill. The contamination affected all samples at a similar level, indicating that it occurs systematically by the presently used technology.
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