Mineral oil in vegetable oils : Laboratory and Industrial Issues Florence LACOSTE, ITERG
Recherche . Innovation . Qualité
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Agenda Mineral oil composition EFSA Scientific Opinion on Mineral Oil Hydrocarbons in food Methods of analysis Standardization work (ISO & CEN levels) Origin of the contamination
Examples of contamination Effect of refining on the mineral oil contamination FEDIOL code of practice for the management of mineral oil hydrocarbons in vegetable oils Conclusion
2
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Mineral oil (MO) composition
EFSA Journal 2012;10(6):2704
MOH
Food grade
(C10 –C50)
Paraffins MOSH 65% à 85% Naphtenes
Technical grade MOAH 15 % à 35%
Aromatics (PAHs)
3
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Mineral oil (MO) composition Natural hydrocarbons
Chemical composition of MOH largely unknown Depending on the crude oil source and the process, MOH products composition can vary batch to batch
Mineral oil : unresolved complex mixture
Number of isomers increases exponentially with the number of carbon atoms (number of substances > 100 000) unresolved complex mixture Quantification of total MOSH and total MOAH is achievable
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
Contaminated Sunflower oil (MOSH analysis)
4
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
14
Mineral oil: EFSA Scientific Opinion
EFSA Journal 2012;10(6):2704
CONTAM Panel conclusions: Potential concern associated with the current exposure to MOSH in Europe (white oils as release agents for bread and rolls, spraying of grains) Exposure to MOAH through food considered to be of potential concern because of its specific health risk Total MOSH and MOAH should be separately determined 2 sub-classes to be distinguished: MOSH up to n-C16 & MOSH from n-C16 to n-C35
5
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Mineral oil determination - Critical points Principle of the methods : First step : isolation of hydrocarbons by liquid chromatography or HPLC Second step (optional) : extra purification and concentration in order to increase the sensitivity Third step : gas chromatography analysis with FID detection
Critical points:
6
Integration of the hump & subtraction of the “natural hydrocarbons” Quantification of hydrocarbons without loosing the volatile ones Removal of interference compounds Limit of quantification as low as possible DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Ring test organised by a French producer 6 European laboratories using their own method + 1 reference Labo 8 different samples
dispersion of the results (between 40 and 130 for sample H) 180
Reference Lab
160
2010
140 120 100 80 60 50 40 20 0 A
B
C
D
E
F
In 2010, it was stated that a reference method was needed 7-
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
G
H
Standardization : on-going work ISO/TC34/SC11 ISO work :
CEN/TC275/WG13 EC requirement :
determination of saturated aliphatic determination of mineral oil hydrocarbons in vegetable oils (MOSH) method able to distinguish MOSH (Mineral crude and refined vegetable oils Oil Saturated Hydrocarbons) and MOAH (Mineral Oil Aromatic Hydrocarbons) pre-trial in 2012 crude and refined vegetable oils collaborative study in 2013 & 2014 foodstuffs on basis of vegetable oils
ISO 17780: 2015 for MOSH
8
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Method for MOSH & MOAH Expected publication : 07/2017
ISO 17780 : MOSH determination « mineral oil »
Fractionation of the sample by LC on silica gel impregnated with AgNO3 Quantification with C18 (IS) Injection of a reference standard blend (C10C40) and a C48 standard GC condition on an apolar column (15 m) Double integration (subtraction of the peaks above the hump)
Silica gel with AgNO3 18,5 g Test portion 1 g Elution with hexane 55 ml
9
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
« natural hydrocarbons »
ISO 17780 : Validation 2013 Trial : 7 oil samples + 2 foodstuffs virgin olive O + huile minérale refined pomace olive O crude palm O + gasoil refined grapeseed O refined sunflower O refined sunflower O + MOSH crude soja O + MOSH margarine & mayonnaise + MOSH
2012 Pre-trial : 2 oil samples virgin olive O + 50 ppm crude soja O +450 ppm pomace olive (163 mg/kg)
olive (50 mg/kg)
Laboratories : 39 participants from 12 pays soja (90 mg/kg)
grapeseed (235 mg/kg)
2014 Trial : 6 oil samples virgin olive O + MOSH refined pomace olive O refined rapeseed O refined sunflower O + MOSH crude soja O + MOSH
Laboratories : 21 participants from 9 pays
10
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
ISO 17780 : Validation
160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0
Sample 4: 50 mg/kg spiked virgin olive oil Lab mean value (mg/kg)
Lab mean value (mg/kg)
Sample 2: 50 mg/kg spiked olive oil
26 3 8 23 21 34 15 31 1 19 4 33 36 9 28 17 30 27 29 24 11 10 35 5 32 12 6 22 2 18 20 14
160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 20 12 14 10
9
13 16 15
1
11 19
4
8
Laboratories
Laboratories
Mineral oil – 50 mg/kg spiked olive oil
7
sample 2-2013
sample 4-2014
Spiking level (mg/kg)
50
50
Mean value (m)
52
52
Repeatability limit (r)
19,3
15,3
Reproducibility limit (R)
51,7
28,1
Horrat value
4,1
2,2
Improvement of the precision data by selecting experienced laboratories 11
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
5
2
6
17
ISO 17780 : 2014 collaborative trial sample 1-2014 sample 2-2014 sample 3-2014
pomace olive oil refined rapeseed oil spiked refined sunflower oil
sample 4-2014 sample 5-2014 sample 6-2014
spiked virgin olive oil = sample 2-2013 spiked refined sunflower oil crude soybean oil
Mineral oil - MOSH
1
2
3
4
5
6
Number of participating laboratories
20
20
20
20
20
20
Number of laboratories retained after elim. outliers
18
18
18
18
17
18
-
-
100
50
25
-
Mean (m)
119
11
107
52
38
90
Repeatability standard deviation (sr)
4,4
3,1
3,7
5,5
2,7
4,9
Repeatability relative standard deviation (RSDr)
3,7%
28,1%
3,4%
10,5%
7,2%
5,4%
Repeatability limit (r)
12,4
8,7
10,3
15,3
7,6
13,7
Reproducibility standard deviation (sR)
14,8
8,2
11,2
10,0
9,6
9,2
12,4%
73,9%
10,4%
19,3%
25,7%
10,2%
41,4
22,9
31,2
28,1
27,0
25,6
Spiking level (mg/kg)
Reproducibility relative standard deviation (RSDR) Reproducibility limit (R)
Scope Method applicable from 50 mg/kg 12
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
MOSH and MOAH Determination – 2014 trials Determination of aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons in animal and vegetable fats and oils with on-line-HPLC-GC-FID analysis” Principle of the method Fractionation of MOSH & MOAH with HPLC/UV On-line injection with large volume of each fraction followed by GC/FID analysis Optional purification by LC on a SilicaALOX column (to get rid of C23-C33 nalkanes) Optional clean-up by an epoxidation procedure (to avoid interferences with olefinic substances ) Biedermann, Grob. Journal of Chromatography A, 1255 (2012) 56– 75 13
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
MOSH & MOAH - 2015 Collaborative study - Samples sample
14
matrix
Spiking
Mineral oil used
Level of spiking
1 & 13
refined sunflower oil 1
none
2 & 16
crude soybean oil
none
3 & 20
virgin olive oil
none
4 & 17
refined sunflower oil 2
yes
MOSH & MOAH (75:25)
110 mg/kg
5 & 19
refined sunflower oil 3
yes
MOSH
20 mg/kg
6 & 11
refined sunflower oil 4
yes
MOSH & MOAH (70:30)
150 mg/kg
7 & 15
refined olive pomace oil
8 & 12
mayonnaise
yes
MOSH & MOAH (75:25)
150 mg/kg
9 & 18
palm oil
yes
MOSH & MOAH (75:25)
70 mg/kg
10 & 14
margarine
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Epoxidation purification asked
ALOX purification asked
Epoxidation purification asked
none
none
Remarks
Epoxidation purification needed Epoxidation purification needed
MOAH - 2015 Collaborative study – impact of the epoxidation step For pomace olive oil samples with very long chain MOSH, part of the hump may be lost by incomplete elution
refined olive pomace oil
palm oil
Palm oil and olive oil samples need an epoxidation step for the MOAH determination 15
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
MOSH & MOAH - 2015 Collaborative study - Results - Some of the participants reported data as “< LOQ” for MOAH in non-spiked oil - It was decided to use the value of the LOQ as the result for the calculation of the precision data
Laboratories
Laboratories
Sunflower 3 is Sunflower 1 spiked only with MOSH no difference in MOAH content expected Sunflower 1 : variations between 0 and 10 mg/kg for both MOSH or MOAH
Laboratories
16
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Laboratories
MOSH & MOAH - 2015 Collaborative study - Results
Laboratories
Laboratories
When samples are spiked (> 10 mg/kg), the dispersion of the laboratories is less important
Laboratories
17
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Laboratories
2015 Collaborative study – MOSH – Precision data sample 1 sample 2 sample 3
refined sunflower oil crude soybean oil virgin olive oil
samples 4-5-6 sample 7 sample 8
refined sunflower oil refined olive pomace oil mayonnaise
sample 9 sample 10
palm oil margaribe
Sample
1& 13
2& 16
3& 20
4& 17
5& 19
6& 11
7& 15
8& 12
9& 18
10 & 14
Number of laboratories
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
Number of laboratories retained after eliminating outliers
12
12
12
11
11
10
10
12
11
11
Number of outliers (laboratories)
0
0
0
1
1
2
2
0
1
1
MOSH mean value, mg/kg
4,0
190,3
6,0
80,9
21,4 101,3 196,6 101,9 53,9
5,0
Repeatability standard deviation, mg/kg
1,1
6,1
1,7
4,1
2,0
1,8
7,5
2,5
3,4
0,2
Repeatability relative standard deviation (RSDr), %
28%
3%
29%
5%
9%
2%
4%
2%
6%
4%
Repeatability limit r, mg/kg
3,1
17,2
4,9
11,6
5,5
5,2
21,1
6,9
9,6
0,5
Reproducibility standard deviation, mg/kg
3,0
26,0
3,0
9,7
3,9
13,7
30,9
8,8
12,2
3,5
Reproducibility relative standard deviation (RSDR), %
75%
14%
50%
12%
18%
14%
16%
9%
23%
70%
Reproducibility limit R, mg/kg
8,4
72,9
8,4
27,1
11,0
38,3
86,6
24,7
34,2
9,8
Application limit fixed at 10 mg/kg for MOSH with the method as described 18
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
2015 Collaborative study – MOAH – Precision data sample 1 sample 2 sample 3
refined sunflower oil crude soybean oil virgin olive oil
samples 4-5-6 sample 7 sample 8
refined sunflower oil refined olive pomace oil mayonnaise
sample 9 sample 10
palm oil margaribe
Sample
1& 13
2& 16
3& 20
4& 17
5& 19
6& 11
7& 15
8& 12
9& 18
10 & 14
Number of laboratories
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
12
10
Number of laboratories retained after eliminating outliers
11
12
11
10
11
12
11
12
11
9
Number of outliers (laboratories)
1
0
1
2
1
0
1
0
1
1
MOAH mean value, mg/kg
2,0
1,6
1,7
29,3
4,2
50,7
44,7
36,1
11,4
2,4
Repeatability standard deviation, mg/kg
0,7
0,5
0,5
1,6
0,3
5,6
2,5
3,2
1,0
1,3
Repeatability relative standard deviation (RSDr), %
36%
29%
33%
6%
7%
11%
6%
9%
9%
53,4%
Repeatability limit r, mg/kg
2,0
1,3
1,5
4,6
0,8
15,7
7,0
9,0
2,9
3,5
Reproducibility standard deviation, mg/kg
1,9
1,3
1,3
6,6
2,7
15,6
23,0
7,4
1,9
3,6
Reproducibility relative standard deviation (RSDR), %
94%
81%
79%
23%
64%
31%
51%
20%
17%
152%
Reproducibility limit R, mg/kg
5,2
3,7
3,7
18,5
7,5
43,6
64,3
20,7
5,4
10,0
Application limit fixed at 10 mg/kg for MOAH with the method as described 19
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Origin of the contamination Plant protection
Seeds
Crop Storage Transport Crushing Meal
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Diesel or lubricant leakage
Treatment of the seeds (anti-dusting)
Transport in contaminated containers Diesel or lubricant leakage Technical oils used in the oil mill
Crude oil Mineral oil
20
Environmental pollution (air, soil)
Multiple sources of mineral oil
EFSA Journal 2012;10(6):2704
The quality of the mineral oils, in terms of molecular mass range and MOAH content, differs for the sources.
21
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Anti-dusting agent White mineral oil may be safely used in food in USA (21 CFR 172.878) As a dust control agent for wheat, corn, soybean, barley, rice, rye, oats, and sorghum Applied at a level of no more than 200 mg/kg of grain.
22
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Plant protection Paraffinic white oils are used for plant protection for: - winter and spring insecticide treatment (pome fruit, stone fruit), - adjuvant for herbicide spray (beetroot, rapeseed) TRACE GC-Channel 1 Vegefix
TRACE GC-Channel 1 Oviphyt
450
450
400
400
350
350
300
300
Millivolts
Millivolts
Retention T ime Name
250
250
200
200
150
150
100
100
50
50
0
0 0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9 Minutes
23
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Contamination during transport 2008: mineral oil in crude sunflower oil
1999: diesel in crude palm oil 17 000 µV C5 C7
16 000 15 000
ech ITERG1114.DATA N-Paraffines-1067.DATA
IFP analysis simulated distillation
14 000
Sample prepared by ITERG (saponification of 15 g + purification on silica gel)
13 000 C8
12 000 11 000 10 000
C 17
C 18
C 15
C 16
C 13
C 14
5 000
C 12
C 10
6 000
C 11
7 000
C9
8 000
C6
9 000
4
6
8
10
White MO included in the EU list of previous cargoes DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
C 64
C 68
RT [min] 2
24
C 66
C 58
0
C 62
C 60
C 54
C 56
C 52
C 46
C 50
C 48
C 42
C 44
C 40
C 38
C 36
C 34
C 32
C 30
C 22
1 000
C 24
2 000
C 26
C 20
3 000
C 28
4 000
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
28
30
32
34
36
Contamination with mineral oil during crushing Hexane recovery plant: absorption tower where mineral oil absorbs residual hexane in air before being exhausted to the air
25
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Contamination with thermal heating fluid 2009 : contamination of walnut oil with a food grade thermal heating fluid during refining process MOSH < 50 mg/kg 400
MOSH = 372 mg/kg 800
TRACE GC-Channel 1 6114
800
400
TRACE GC-Channel 1 613 B
Retention Time
Name Retention Time
Natural hydrocarbons
350
350
700
300
700
300
600
600
250
250
500
500
Millivolts
Millivolts
200 Millivolts
200
400
150
400
150
300
300
100
100
200
200
50
50
100
100
0
13.208
0
-50 1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12 Minutes
Pressed Walnut oil
26
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
13
14
15
16
0 17 0
0
-50 18
2
19
420
21 6
22
8
23
1024
12
14
16
18
Minutes
Contaminated Refined walnut oil
20
22
Migration from packaging 2014 : contaminated sample with a high boiling fraction of paraffin oil (POSH) coming from the low-density-polyethylene-bottles (food grade bottle) Extraction with hexane of a new bottle
Mineral oil used to spike the oil
27
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Bottled oil
Effect of deodorization on mineral oil Wagner, Neukom, Grob, Moret, Populin, Conte, Mitt. Lebensm. Hyg. 92, 499–514 (2001)
Crude oil with 2 types of mineral paraffins: - one centered at n-C22 - one from C28 to beyond C40 Deodorization completely removed: - MOSH up to C23 - about 50% of C25 alkanes.
Step of the process
28
MOSH content (mg/kg)
Crude oil
50
Neutralized soap
40
After bleaching
55
After deodorization
14
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Effect of deodorization on mineral oil Wagner, Neukom, Grob, Moret, Populin, Conte, Mitt. Lebensm. Hyg. 92, 499–514 (2001)
4 samples of deodistillates: - A : mineral paraffins (C16 - C33) centered at C23 - B : diesel or heating oil (C9-12) + mineral paraffins (C20 - C40) centered at C29 - C & D : mineral paraffins (C16 - C33) centered at C23 + PAO (C34;C41) Number of analysed samples of deodistillates
28
MOSH min (mg/kg)
120
MOSH max (mg/kg)
6 800
MOSH mean value (mg/kg)
1200 mg/kg
230 mg/kg
350 mg/kg
250 mg/kg
650
poly-alpha-olefins (PAO): synthetic base oils used for high grade motor oils or as food-compatible technical oils.
29
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
FEDIOL Recommendations FEDIOL code of practice for the management of mineral oil hydrocarbons presence in vegetable oils and fats intended for food uses (24 February 2016) Prevention in vegetable oil and fat crushing and refining plants Only lubricants suitable for incidental contact with food to be used Mineral oil used as absorber in the hexane recovery system free from MOAH Steam used for heating in processing installations
Control of possible sources of MOH contamination in the supply chain Transport in bulk of oils: thermal heating fluids not used in direct heating systems Spraying of white mineral oil as anti-dusting: monitoring of MOH levels in soybean oils and verification of the absence of MOAH
Monitoring scientific developments and next steps More precise identification of the possible entry sources of MOH Exploration of the MOH mitigation strategies through refining
30
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Conclusion Mineral oil hydrocarbons are present at different levels in nearly all foods, including in vegetable oils (EFSA) MOAH fraction may be both mutagenic and carcinogenic (EFSA) There is a potential concern associated to the background exposure to MOSH (EFSA) no EU legislation regulating the limits of MOH in vegetable oils Standardized method for MOSH published in 2015 Standardized method MOSH & MOAH soon available with application limits at 10 mg/kg Mineral oil may be introduced at different stages of the vegetable oil and fat production
Total removal of mineral oil during refining seems very difficult 31
DGF Symposium, 10 March 2016
Pour nous contacter :
ITERG 11 rue Monge Parc Industriel Bersol 2 33600 PESSAC Tél : 05.56.36.00.44
[email protected] www.iterg.com
Recherche . Innovation . Qualité
32