pubmed-article:3624188 | pubmed:abstractText | A method is described for determining ethyl carbamate at low microgram/kg levels in several types of alcoholic beverages by capillary column gas chromatography with Hall electrolytic conductivity detection and confirmation by mass spectrometry. Samples are diluted to obtain a uniform concentration of ethanol (ca 10%) then saturated with NaCl and extracted with methylene chloride. Extracts are evaporated to a small volume and injected in ethyl acetate solution for chromatographic analysis. The method was evaluated by 5 laboratories, 4 employing the Hall detector and one using mass spectrometric detection. Overall between-laboratory mean percent recoveries were: wine, 85.3 +/- 21.0% coefficient of variation (CV) (spiking level 20-45 micrograms/kg); sherry, 83.8 +/- 16.1% CV (spiking level, 81-142 micrograms/kg); whiskey, 79.5 +/- 13.9% CV (spiking level 127-190 micrograms/kg); and brandy, 85.0 +/- 12.5% CV (spiking level 297-446 micrograms/kg). Mass spectrometric results agreed well with the Hall results for all commodities. Detection limits were about 5 micrograms/kg for the Hall detector and about 0.5 microgram/kg for mass spectrometric detection. | lld:pubmed |