4.3 Article Proceedings Paper

Photodegradation of pesticides and application of bioanalytical methods for their detection

Journal

PURE AND APPLIED CHEMISTRY
Volume 77, Issue 10, Pages 1727-1736

Publisher

INT UNION PURE APPLIED CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1351/pac200577101727

Keywords

pesticides; photodegradation; bioanalytical methods; flow-injection analysis; acetylcholinesterase

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Photodegradation of coumaphos and azinphos-methyl in the air, in oxygen, and in nitrogen atmosphere (quartz reactor equipped with six 18-W lamps with the maximum emission intensity at 310 nm) was studied. The fastest reaction occurred with coumaphos in nitrogen atmosphere (complete decomposition in 10 min), where the formation of a new compound was also detected by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). In the case of azinphos-methyl, no additional signals in HPLC chromatogram were observed. The rearrangement mechanism, involving a triplet-state activation complex and the formation of an acetylcholinesterase (AChE)-inhibiting oxo analog of coumaphos was verified and confirmed by laser flash photolysis. The suitability of bioanalytical flow-injection analysis (FIA) systems, based on AChE inhibition and spectrophotometric or thermal lens spectrometric detection for rapid and sensitive screening in food quality control was demonstrated. Owing to the high sensitivity of thermal lens spectrometry (TLS), several steps in sample preparation can be avoided (pre-concentration, purification, isolation) and incubation times reduced. High sample throughputs (10 h(-1)) are, however, also achievable for medium toxic oxo organophosphorus (OP) pesticides using spectrophotometric detection providing limits of detection (LODs) at the level of 10 ppb malaoxon equivalents, which is still about 50 times below maximal residue levels. Testing of the rnethod for practical application on a set of 60 samples gave no false negative results and a level of 1.7 % false positives.

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