Then: only two years ago...
I started working with the LASPB (Public Health Agency of Barcelona Laboratory) even before I joined officially two years ago. I got the opportunity because of my experience in high-resolution mass spectrometry – specifically Orbitrap-based MS systems; it was the focus of my PhD at CSIC (the Spanish National Research Council) and I’ve been using Orbitrap technology ever since. We are an official control lab and we analyze more than 35,000 (mainly food) samples per year at LASPB – so we’re pretty busy; in fact, we have an ‘open accreditation scope’, which means we’re obliged to analyze any food commodity that a client sends to us – including requests for new analytes. The lab here introduced LC-Orbitrap systems five years ago, which are particularly useful for confirmation or to troubleshoot problematic analyses, but GC-Orbitrap was unfortunately unavailable.We were facing two main problems in GC-MS analysis. First, we found it challenging to reach very low limits of quantitation (LOQ) for some emerging compounds – polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs), a group of brominated flame retardants. In 2014, the European Commission requested that such compounds be monitored, with LOQ recommendations. Limited to a triple-quadrupole MS system, we had to work hard on sample preparation to concentrate the analytes of interest – if your instrument can’t catch the standard, you’ve got no hope in the matrix... We managed to hit the LOQs for all PBDEs except one – the notoriously tricky BDE-209. It’s a big molecule, which causes column difficulties but also sensitivity problems; sensitivity of triple quad instruments drops off significantly at higher molecular masses. The second challenge in our GC-MS applications was in pesticide analysis – not because that is particularly challenging, but because, unlike LC-MS where we had Orbitrap-based systems, we didn’t have a confirmatory analytical method or an alternative technology for challenging matrices/interferences when it came to GC. Having confidence in our analytical results is extremely important, because they can have legal and financial implications; we must avoid false positives or false negatives!