Abstract
The possibility of using the protonated methanol-adduct of antimicrobial amoxicillin for its identification and quantification at residue levels has been investigated, since it is impossible to completely suppress the formation of these adducts when methanol is present in the solvent system. This process has been monitored over time and as a function of concentration. It was determined that adducts were instantly formed and that the abundance of the protonated methanol-adduct at m/z 398 increased at the expense of the protonated molecule m/z 366 with storage time. The effect of several common solvents and mobile-phase additives on the ionization efficiency of amoxicillin and the formation of the methanol adduct has also been investigated. It was shown that the mass spectra of amoxicillin were strongly influenced by the solvent in which the analyte is dissolved and by the analyte concentration, as well as by the composition of mobile phase. Methanol was determined to be the best spray solvent, as it provided spectra with the lowest abundance of dimer ions. It was also determined that acetic acid as the mobile-phase additive provided the highest signal intensities, while ammonium acetate should not be used as an additive for the determination of amoxicillin at residue levels. Using high-performance liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry (HPLC/ESI-MS/MS), fragmentation of the protonated molecules and the protonated methanol-adduct ions, in both positive and negative ion mode, has been performed. The fragmentation was stable and strong product ion spectra were obtained. The linearity of the MS detector response, and that of the chromatographic method, was tested. Due to the linear behaviour it was concluded that the protonated methanol-adduct ion can be used for analytical purposes, i.e. for identification and quantification of amoxicillin at trace levels.
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