Abstract

Pesticide isomers are widely present in agricultural production, while their biological activity, efficacy, and toxicity may vary significantly. Due to structural similarity, chromatographic and mass spectrometric analysis of isomeric pesticides are challenging. In this experiment, representative isomeric pesticides with great differences in toxicity and maximum residue limits among countries were studied. Based on collision-induced dissociation (CID) of high-resolution mass spectrometry, the fragmentation pathways of substituent position isomer, functional group position isomer, carbon frame isomer, functional group isomer, and cis–trans isomer were analyzed to attribute fragment ions. In addition, for the isomers with the same product ions and different abundance ratios, the abundance differences at different energy-resolved mass spectrometry were analyzed, which was combined with the computational chemical density functional theory to simulate the specific process of fragmentation and to explain the reasons for the differences in fragment ions and abundance ratios. Based on the above study, a high-resolution mass spectrometry method was established for the separation and analysis of pesticide isomers. Twelve pesticide isomers were distinguished by retention time, fragment ions, and relative abundance ratio. This method was applied to the detection of real fruit and vegetable samples.

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