Environmental monitoring and cleanup GC–MS is becoming the tool of choice for tracking organic pollutants in the environment. The cost of GC–MS equipment has decreased significantly, and the reliability has increased at the same time, which has contributed to its increased adoption in
environmental studies.
Criminal forensics GC–MS can analyze the particles from a human body in order to help link a criminal to a
crime. The analysis of
fire debris using GC–MS is well established, and there is even an established American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) standard for fire debris analysis. GCMS/MS is especially useful here as samples often contain very complex matrices, and results used in court need to be highly accurate.
Law enforcement GC–MS is increasingly used for detection of illegal narcotics, and may eventually supplant drug-sniffing dogs.[1] A simple and selective GC–MS method for detecting marijuana usage was recently developed by the Robert Koch Institute in Germany. It involves identifying an acid metabolite of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the active ingredient in marijuana, in urine samples by employing derivatization in the sample preparation. GC–MS is also commonly used in forensic toxicology to find drugs and/or poisons in biological specimens of suspects, victims, or the deceased. In drug screening, GC–MS methods frequently utilize liquid-liquid extraction as a part of sample preparation, in which target compounds are extracted from blood plasma.
Sports anti-doping analysis GC–MS is the main tool used in sports anti-doping laboratories to test athletes' urine samples for prohibited performance-enhancing drugs, for example
anabolic steroids.
Security A post–September 11 development,
explosive detection systems have become a part of all
US airports. These systems run on a host of technologies, many of them based on GC–MS. There are only three manufacturers certified by the
FAA to provide these systems, one of which is Thermo Detection (formerly Thermedics), which produces the
EGIS, a GC–MS-based line of explosives detectors. The other two manufacturers are Barringer Technologies, now owned by Smith's Detection Systems, and Ion Track Instruments, part of General Electric Infrastructure Security Systems.
Chemical warfare agent detection As part of the post-September 11 drive towards increased capability in homeland security and public health preparedness, traditional GC–MS units with transmission quadrupole mass spectrometers, as well as those with cylindrical ion trap (CIT-MS) and toroidal ion trap (T-ITMS) mass spectrometers have been modified for field portability and near real-time detection of chemical warfare agents (CWA) such as sarin, soman, and VX. These complex and large GC–MS systems have been modified and configured with resistively heated low thermal mass (LTM) gas chromatographs that reduce analysis time to less than ten percent of the time required in traditional laboratory systems. Additionally, the systems are smaller, and more mobile, including units that are mounted in mobile analytical laboratories (MAL), such as those used by the United States Marine Corps Chemical and Biological Incident Response Force MAL and other similar laboratories, and systems that are hand-carried by two-person teams or individuals, much ado to the smaller mass detectors. Depending on the system, the analytes can be introduced via liquid injection, desorbed from sorbent tubes through a
thermal desorption process, or with solid-phase micro extraction (SPME).
Chemical engineering GC–MS is used for the analysis of unknown organic compound mixtures. One critical use of this technology is the use of GC–MS to determine the composition of bio-oils processed from raw biomass. GC–MS is also utilized in the identification of continuous phase component in a smart material,
magnetorheological (MR) fluid.
Food, beverage and perfume analysis Foods and
beverages contain numerous
aromatic compounds, some naturally present in the raw materials and some forming during processing. GC–MS is extensively used for the analysis of these compounds which include
esters,
fatty acids,
alcohols,
aldehydes,
terpenes etc. It is also used to detect and measure contaminants from spoilage or
adulteration which may be harmful and which is often controlled by governmental agencies, for example
pesticides.
Astrochemistry Several GC–MS systems have left earth. Two were brought to
Mars by the
Viking program.
Venera 11 and 12 and
Pioneer Venus analysed the atmosphere of
Venus with GC–MS. The
Huygens probe of the
Cassini–Huygens mission landed one GC–MS on
Saturn's largest moon,
Titan. The
MSL Curiosity rover's
Sample analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument contains both a gas chromatograph and quadrupole mass spectrometer that can be used in tandem as a GC–MS. The material in the
comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko was analysed by the
Rosetta mission with a chiral GC–MS in 2014.
Medicine Dozens of congenital metabolic diseases also known as
inborn errors of metabolism (IEM) are now detectable by
newborn screening tests, especially the testing using gas chromatography–mass spectrometry. GC–MS can determine compounds in urine even in minor concentration. These compounds are normally not present but appear in individuals suffering with metabolic disorders. This is increasingly becoming a common way to diagnose IEM for earlier diagnosis and institution of treatment eventually leading to a better outcome. It is now possible to test a newborn for over 100 genetic metabolic disorders by a urine test at birth based on GC–MS. In combination with
isotopic labeling of metabolic compounds, the GC–MS is used for determining
metabolic activity. Most applications are based on the use of
13C as the labeling and the measurement of 13C-12C ratios with an
isotope ratio mass spectrometer (IRMS); an MS with a detector designed to measure a few select ions and return values as ratios. == See also ==