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Acrylamide in Food, p. 481-495

DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-802832-2.00025-5

American Chemical Society, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1(62), p. 74-79, 2013

DOI: 10.1021/jf404205b

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Quantitation of Acrylamide in Foods by High-Resolution Mass Spectrometry

Journal article published in 2013 by Antonio Dario Troise ORCID, Alberto Fiore, Vincenzo Fogliano
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Acrylamide detection still represents one of the hottest topics in food chemistry. Solid phase cleanup coupled to liquid chromatography separation and tandem mass spectrometry detection along with GC-MS detection are nowadays the gold standard procedure for acrylamide quantitation thanks to high reproducibility, good recovery, and low relative standard deviation. High-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) is particularly suitable for the detection of low molecular weight amides, and it can provide some analytical advantages over other MS techniques. In this paper a liquid chromatography (LC) method for acrylamide determination using HRMS detection was developed and compared to LC coupled to tandem mass spectrometry. The procedure applied a simplified extraction, no cleanup steps, and a 4 min chromatography. It proved to be solid and robust with an acrylamide mass accuracy of 0.7 ppm, a limit of detection of 2.65 ppb, and a limit of quantitation of 5 ppb. The method was tested on four acrylamide-containing foods: cookies, French fries, ground coffee, and brewed coffee. Results were perfectly in line with those obtained by LC-MS/MS.