Small molecules in food contact materials may migrate into food during their contact. To extensively analyze the migrants, non-targeted screening is needed to detect the migrants. The migrants' detection is difficult because of the complexity and the trace amount of the migrants. In this work, the dissolution precipitation method was used to extract small molecules in Polyamide (PA) kitchenware. The extract solutions were screened by ultra-performance liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight-mass spectrometry (UPLC-QTOF-MS) for non-targeted analysis and 64 different small molecules in materials were identified through the screening of a self-built database. Then, migration tests were performed to analyze migrants in food simulants. It suggests that the abundance of PA oligomers was the highest in migrants. The risk assessment of migrants revealed that the exposure of most migrants was at a safer level unlike the exposure of PA oligomers that exceeded their threshold of toxicological concern (TTC).
Keywords: Migrants; PA food contact materials; TTC; UPLC-QTOF-MS.
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