DOI: 10.3390/molecules31132220 ISSN: 1420-3049

Detection of Essential Oil Adulteration Using High-Temperature Gas Chromatography with a Flame Ionization Detector

Michal Fulín, Róbert Kubinec, Jaroslav Blaško, Róbert Bodor, Janka Kubincová, Ľubomíra Duhačková, Pavel Farkaš, Radomír Čabala

Essential oils are natural products frequently subject to economically motivated adulteration with cheaper substances like vegetable oils, mineral oils, or organic solvents. This study developed and validated a rapid high-temperature gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (HTGC-FID) method for the simultaneous determination of high-boiling adulterants: triacylglycerides (vegetable oils) and medicinal white oil (mineral oil) in essential oils. The method utilizes on-column injection onto a DB-5 capillary column (30 m × 0.53 mm, 0.88 μm) with a temperature program from 60 to 380 °C and hydrogen carrier gas. Validation parameters demonstrated excellent linearity (R2 = 0.9957–0.9978), high repeatability (content RSD < 3%), and sufficient sensitivity (LOQ of 0.03% for triacylglycerides, and 0.63% for medicinal white oil). The method was successfully applied to 20 commercial essential oils. While medicinal white oil was undetected, several samples contained triacylglycerides (up to 3.79%) and other adulterants (up to 52%). Significantly reduced response factors confirmed extensive adulteration in some products. The proposed HTGC-FID method represents a simple, cost-effective, and efficient tool for routine quality control, enabling direct quantification of high-boiling adulterants without tedious sample preparation.

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