Abstract

Materials in direct contact with food should be monitored for the presence of species able to migrate into food. A direct method based on liquid extraction surface analysis nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry (LESA-nanoESI-MS) was developed for the analysis of the migrating species from a polymer film. Different types of molecules: post-polymerization residues, degradation products (oligomers resulting from polymer recycling, products of polymer oxidative degradation) and anti-oxidant additives (vitamin E) were demonstrated to be detected and identified, and determined quantitatively if relevant calibration standards are available. The method was validated by a comparison a standard method based on with bulk extraction mass spectrometry. It offers considerable advantages over the latter in terms of drastically reduced analysis time and solvent consumption. Also, LESA-nanoESI-MS produced simpler spectra (limited to compounds able to migrate into food) than Direct Analysis in Real Time (DART).

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