Mineral oil aromatic hydrocarbons (MOAHs) include mutagenic and carcinogenic substances and are considered a potential health risk. Current methods address the total MOAH content but cannot address the actual toxicological hazard of individual components. This work presents a combined methodology closing those gaps: high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) coupled to gas chromatography with flame ionization detection was used to determine the MOAH content. To characterize present substance classes, comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography with time-of-flight mass spectrometry was applied. Preparative HPLC separated MOAHs into subgroups, which were tested with a miniaturized Ames test evaluating DNA reactivity of isolated fractions. Combining these methods allowed a correlation between present subgroups and DNA reactivity. The developed approach was applied to a mineral oil and distinguished between not DNA-reactive mono-and diaromatics and DNA-reactive triand polyaromatics, providing a proof of concept. Hereinafter, it will be applied to diverse sample matrices including mineral oils, food, and food contact materials.
In September 2022, the European Commission published its new regulation on recycled plastic materials for food contact. It allows newly developed, non-authorized technologies and approaches, or so-called novel technologies, to be deployed in the field to generate the data needed for establishing regulatory and/or fit for purpose processes. The data shall be generated by using suitable methods, but the regulation does not give a more detailed description on those. In this study, commercially purchased buckets made of post-consumer recycled polypropylene were screened, using a number of different analytical approaches. Sample preparation methods, analysis techniques, and the data and information generated were compared. The results clearly demonstrate the need for a detailed characterization of such materials and the advantages and disadvantages of the analysis using conventional gas chromatography with flame ionization detection and mass spectrometery as well as two-dimensional comprehensive gas chromatography with time of flight mass spectrometry.
Graphical Abstract
We present how harmful
different wood extractives carried over
to paper mill with unbleached softwood Kraft pulp are for the strength
of packaging papers and boards. The investigations were done by simulating
industrial papermaking conditions in laboratory-scale trials for handsheet
production. It was found that fatty acids are the most relevant compounds
in the carryover pitch extractives (CPEs), as they readily interfere
in fiber–fiber bonding strength, control the properties of
CPE micelles, and are furthermore the most abundant compounds. Addition
of cationic starch improved strength and evened out the strength differences
of handsheets with different CPE compounds. Oleic acid (unsaturated
fatty acid) was an exception, as it was above average harmful for
paper strength without cationic starch and also heavily impaired the
functioning of cationic starch. As a whole, these findings demonstrate
that fatty acids, especially unsaturated ones, are the most relevant
CPE compounds contributing to the reduced efficiency of cationic starch
and decreased strength of unbleached softwood Kraft paper. This makes
the cleaning of process waters by precipitating CPEs on the pulp fibers
harmful for paper strength.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.