Gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric analysis of acrylamide and acetamide in cigarette mainstream smoke after on-column injection

J Chromatogr Sci. 2008 Aug;46(7):659-63. doi: 10.1093/chromsci/46.7.659.

Abstract

A method is described for the simultaneous determination of two short-chained amides, acrylamide and acetamide (classified by the International Agency for Research on Cancer as probable and possible human carcinogens, respectively), in total particulate matter using gas chromatography-on-column injection and mass spectrometric detection. Sample preparation is kept to a minimum, and the proposed analytical procedure proves to be fast, sensitive, and precise. Validation studies show good linearity with a regression coefficient of r2=.000 for both compounds. Quantitation limits are 32 ng/mL for acrylamide and 70 ng/mL for acetamide. In the particulate phase of mainstream smoke from the University of Kentucky Reference Cigarette 2R4F, 2.3 microg/cig acrylamide and 4.7 microg/cig acetamide are found; no acetamide and only .0074 microg/cig acrylamide is found in the gas phase. Possible mechanisms of formation in cigarette smoke are discussed.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Acetamides / analysis*
  • Acrylamide / analysis*
  • Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry / methods*
  • Nicotiana*
  • Smoke / analysis*

Substances

  • Acetamides
  • Smoke
  • Acrylamide
  • acetamide