Assessment of the plasma desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry technique for pesticide adsorption and degradation on 'as-received' treated soil samples

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Abstract

The assessment of the plasma desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PD-TOFMS) technique as a tool for direct characterization of pesticides adsorbed on agricultural soil is made for the first time in this study. Pellets of soils impregnated by solutions of three pesticides, namely norflurazon, malathion and oxyfluorfen, as well as deposits of these solutions onto aluminum surfaces, were investigated to this end. The yield values of the most characteristic peaks of the negative ion mass spectra were used to determine both the lowest concentrations detected on soils and limits of detection from thin films. The lowest values on soils are for malathion (1000 ppm range), and the largest for norflurazon (20 000 ppm), which is close to the limit of detection (LOD) found for the pesticide on the aluminum substrate (∼0.2 μg·cm-2). Different behaviors were observed as a function of time of storage in the ambient atmosphere or under vacuum; norflurazon adsorbed on soil exhibited high stability for a long period of time, and a rapid degradation of malathion with the elapsed time was clearly observed. The behavior of oxyfluorfen was also investigated but segregation processes seem to occur after several days. Although by far less sensitive than conventional methods based on extraction processes and used for real-world analytical applications, this technique is well suited to the study of the transformations occurring at the sample surface. A discussion is presented of the future prospects of such experiments in degradation studies. Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Thomas, J. P., Nsouli, B., Darwish, T., Fallavier, M., Khoury, R., & Wehbé, N. (2005). Assessment of the plasma desorption time-of-flight mass spectrometry technique for pesticide adsorption and degradation on “as-received” treated soil samples. Rapid Communications in Mass Spectrometry, 19(17), 2379–2389. https://doi.org/10.1002/rcm.2068

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