Azodicarbonamide (ADA) is approved as a food additive in flour products due to its oxidising and bleaching properties. However, it is prohibited in Australia and Europe on account of its toxicity and the risk of causing asthma in humans. A method was developed to determine ADA in actual flour samples. This work presents an optimised methodology based on derivatisation and clean-up procedures followed by ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionisation tandem mass spectrometry (UPLC-ESI-MS/MS). The analytical method was successfully validated. An excellent result was obtained for the linearity of matrix-matched calibration curves (R2 > 0.99) in the concentration range of 0.10-80 mg/kg. The recovery rate varied from 81.7% to 102.3%. The relative standard deviations (RSDs) of repeatability (n = 6) were 1.3-4.1%, and inter-day RSDs (n = 6) were 2.2-4.8%. The limit of detection and the limit of quantification were 0.014 and 0.042 mg/kg, which were significantly lower than the requirement of 45 mg/kg stipulated in the Chinese National Food Safety Standard (GB 2760-2014). The detection rate of ADA in 26 flour samples was 23.1%, with the concentration ranging from 0.023 to 23.2 mg/kg.
Keywords: Azodicarbonamide; UPLC–MS/MS; derivation; flour; xanthydrol.