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2.1.4 Method development for PCA analysis
The aim of the project was to develop new methods for the determination of PCAs in
fish and sediments. They should allow a low cost screening and a less complex
determination of formula and congener group patterns. Therefore, the mass
spectrometric techniques described below were developed or improved during this
project and a full method validation and intercomparison was carried out. The were used
to determine PCA concentrations in fish from the North and Baltic Sea as well as from
selected sites from the northern North Atlantic to obtain such information for the first
time.
Negative ion chemical ionisation (NICI) with CH2CI2/CH4: This technique suppressed
strongly interferences from other polychlorinated pollutants, allows even the detection
of low chlorinated PCAs and makes the use of low resolution MS possible. Moreover,
response factors are quite uniform and independent from the degree of chlorination. The
only disadvantage is the limited number of analyses possible, before the mass
spectrometer has to be cleaned.
Electron ionisation combined with MS/MS: Further fragmentation of fragment ions in
common for all PCAs allow the determination of total PCAs with low cost
instrumentation such as an ion trap MS (€ 60'000) with very high selectivity and
detection limits comparable to high resolution mass spectrometry. Response factor
differences are eliminated. The only disadvantage is the missing differentiation between
sPCA and mPCA and that formula/ congener group specific results are not obtained.
The technique has even lower detection limits using more expensive triple quadrupole
MS.
Optimisation of quantification by ECNI: Response factors depend strongly on the
degree of chlorination of PCAs and mass overlap between formula/congener groups
occur with low resolution MS. However, methods could be developed which
compensated the influence of the degree of chlorination and which allowed eliminating
mass overlap interferences by a careful retention time range selection and isotope ratio
control of registered masses. This enabled the use of low resolution MS.