Abstract

A vortex-assisted liquid-liquid microextraction, based on a natural hydrophobic deep eutectic solvent made from the monoterpene thymol and octanoic fatty acid, was employed for the analysis of 11 phthalate esters and one adipate in kombucha (a tea-based fermented beverage). Separation and determination were performed using an ultra-high performance liquid chromatography (UHPLC) system coupled to a single quadrupole mass spectrometer. Confirmatory analyses were carried out through UHPLC tandem mass spectrometry. The full method was validated in terms of matrix effect, matrix-matched calibration, sensitivity, recovery, limits of detection and quantification and repeatability. Satisfactory determination coefficients for quadratic calibration curves (≥0.9938), recovery values (67–120%) and limits of detection (0.07–5.45 µg/L) were obtained. Analysis of 26 kombucha samples reported concentrations for dibutyl phthalate and dimethyl phthalate in the range between the limit of quantification (LOQ) and 16.18 ± 1.14 µg/L, although these phthalates were also detected under the LOQ in some of the analyzed samples. Only one of the samples bottled in plastic containers (7) did not present residues while only five of the 19 samples in glass bottles contained any plasticizer. However, the highest concentration was found in a kombucha bottled in food-grade glass. This work represents the first application in which phthalates and adipates are analyzed in kombuchas.

Highlights

  • IntroductionKnown as sustainable chemistry, aims to design chemical protocols and substances that eliminate (or reduce as much as possible) the generation of hazardous materials [1]

  • Green chemistry, known as sustainable chemistry, aims to design chemical protocols and substances that eliminate the generation of hazardous materials [1]

  • The US EPA has included some of the selected PAEs (BBP, DBP, DEHP, DNOP and DNPP) in the Phthalates Action Plan [24] to ensure a correct assessment of this type of compounds

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Summary

Introduction

Known as sustainable chemistry, aims to design chemical protocols and substances that eliminate (or reduce as much as possible) the generation of hazardous materials [1]. Low transition temperature mixtures (LTTMs, solvents formed by combinations of compounds and characterized by a low transition temperature between the solid and liquid states) and room temperature ionic liquids (ILs) have gained increasing interest [3]. In this regard, deep eutectic solvents (DESs) have been widely studied [4,5] due to their superior characteristics (in comparison to ILs). There are different mixtures with melting temperatures lower than expected, which are frequently included in this category ( some authors prefer the term “eutectic mixtures”)

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