Annali di Chimica 2005-05-01

Determination of diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor in tobacco by gel permeation chromatographic clean-up and high performance liquid chromatography.

Hongxia Liu, Yuanlin Dang, Shusheng Zhang, Huimin Liu, Lingbo Qu, Xincheng Liao, Yufen Zhao, Yangjie Wu

Index: Ann. Chim. 95(5) , 369-74, (2005)

Full Text: HTML

Abstract

Diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor (FIG. 1) are selective, pre-emergence arylamide herbicides used to control the growth of annual grasses and broadleaf weeds in a variety of fields, e.g. fruit trees, nuts, corns, green crops, etc. They possess high activity and moderate toxicity. For food and environment safety, the detailed investigations on their residues and metabolism are very important. Diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor in the pesticide products, serum, urine, soil, environmental water, fruits and wine have been widely analyzed by ELISA, fluorescence, phosphorescence, capillary electrophoresis, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), gas chromatography(GC) and GC mass spectrometry (GC-MS). However, to our knowledge, simultaneous residue analysis of diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor in tobacco samples has not been extensively documented. Tobacco is greatly consumed by smokers throughout the world. The pesticide residue in tobaccos might be potentially harmful to smokers' health. With this in mind the residue determination and control of diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor in the tobacco leaves are very important for tobacco products and consumers. For these three herbicides, the tolerable maximum residue limits (MRLs) have been limited ranging from 0.05 (for tobacco products) to 5 mg/kg (for tobacco leaves) in different European countries. For the complex tobacco samples, the GC and HPLC with UV detection suffer from matrix interference making quantification and identification of these herbicides difficult. In such cases the removal of the matrix effects and identification of the target compounds are of great importance. The present work reports the extraction and clean up procedures, as well as, the chromatographic conditions developed for the simultaneous determination of diphenamide, napropamide and metolachlor residues in the fluecured tobacco leaves, from the different sources using HPLC-UV method.


Related Compounds

Related Articles:

Multiresidue method for the determination of 13 pesticides in three environmental matrices: water, sediments and fish muscle.

2011-09-15

[Talanta 85(3) , 1500-7, (2011)]

Picloram and napropamide sorption as affected by polymer addition and salt concentration.

2002-01-01

[J. Environ. Qual. 31(4) , 1234-9, (2002)]

Impact of soil amendments on broccoli quality and napropamide movement under field conditions.

2005-10-01

[Bull. Environ. Contam. Toxicol. 75(4) , 797-804, (2005)]

Napropamide residues in runoff and infiltration water from pepper production.

2005-01-01

[J. Environ. Sci. Health B 40(3) , 385-96, (2005)]

Fate of napropamide herbicide in selected Malaysian soils.

2012-01-01

[J. Environ. Sci. Health B 47(2) , 144-51, (2012)]

More Articles...