“…It is generally acknowledged that this ''matrix effect'' depends on the solvent chemistry (i.e., organic solvent composition, pH modifier and concentration, etc. ), pesticide chromatographic behavior, the pre-treatment/clean-up method, the pesticide ionization potential and the type of the MS analyzer and detector geometries used (Díez et al, 2006;Marín et al, 2006;Soler, James, & Pico, 2007;Soler & Pico, 2007;Gilbert-López et al, 2007a,b;Hernardo et al, 2007;Mol et al, 2007;Payá et al, 2007;Kruves et al, 2008;Kmellar et al, 2008;Romero-González, Garrido Frenich, & Martínez Vidal, 2008;Esparza, Moyano, & Galceran, 2009;Marín et al, 2009;Nanita, Pentz, & Bramble, 2009;Radišic' et al, 2009;Stahnke, Reemtsma, & Alder, 2009;Wang & Leung, 2009). An interesting strategy to compensate for matrix effects has been proposed recently for the determination of 140 pesticides in food by LC-QqQ-MS/MS (Stahnke, Reemtsma, & Alder, 2009).…”