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Achieving traceable chemical measurements: inter-laboratory evaluation of a simplified technique for isotope dilution mass spectrometry. Part 2. Methodology for high accuracy analysis of organic analytes
Authors:Sargent  Mike  Newman  Gerry  Webb  Ken
Institution:1.Analytical Methods Committee, Analytical Division, The Royal Society of Chemistry, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London, W1J 0BA, UK
;2.LGC Ltd, Queen’s Road, Teddington, TW11 0LY, UK
;
Abstract:

A high accuracy measurement procedure developed and validated at LGC has been transferred to a number of expert UK laboratories, and their experience in applying the technique has been evaluated by inter-laboratory comparisons. It is an “exact matching” calibration procedure for analysis of organic analytes using isotope dilution mass spectrometry (IDMS). This calibration procedure uses a calibration blend and a sample blend with closely matched isotope amount ratios, and is an iterative process, culminating in the calibration blend and sample blend having identical isotope amount ratios. It is capable of high accuracy, since systematic errors in the determination of the isotope amount ratios are cancelled out. A series of four inter-laboratory comparisons of increasing difficulty were carried out involving a number of expert laboratories. The first three comparisons used gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GC–MS) analysis of the pesticide metabolite (pp′-dichlorodiphenyl) dichloroethylene (pp′-DDE), involving both conventional calibration and IDMS exact matching procedures for pp′-DDE in a solvent and a complex liquid matrix (corn oil). The fourth comparisons utilised liquid chromatography mass spectrometry (LC–MS) and involved the analysis of sulphamethazine (4-amino-N-(4,6 dimethyl-2 pyrimidinyl) benzenesulphonamide) in solvent using IDMS and conventional calibration techniques. Following the first trial, a workshop for participants was held on the use of the exact matching procedure together with a short course on uncertainty estimation. The results of the comparisons clearly showed the superior accuracy of using IDMS with the exact matching procedure for both GC–MS and LC–MS applications. These comparisons and the workshop have enabled the methodology to be transferred to UK industry, helping to improve UK measurement capability.

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