Abstract
An alternative, rapid, and reproducible method of analysis for perchlorate in selected food products (fruit and vegetable juice, milk, and bottled water) was developed and validated. Improvements over previous methods were achieved by the use of a rugged and inexpensive C18 column, a multi-mode OASIS HLB solid-phase extraction cartridge for sample clean-up, and acetic acid for pH adjustment and protein precipitation. The hydrophobicity of the perchlorate anion gives it good retention and separation characteristics on C18 chromatographic columns. The C18 column allowed for the use of 90% of acetonitrile at a low flow rate (0.3 ml min−1), without splitting, and could also be regenerated with organic solvents, unlike an ion-exchange column. Perchlorate levels in selected commercial food samples were: <1.0–2.1 ng g−1 (fruit and vegetable juices, reported here for the first time), <1.0–5.0 ng g−1 (milk), and <1.0 ng g−1 (bottled water).
Acknowledgements
The authors thank Dr Jeffrey Barach for reading the manuscript and for helpful suggestions.