posted on 2023-07-20, 12:07authored byYatong Xing, Xinying Gong, Ping Wang, Yu Wang, Lei Wang
Organic phosphite antioxidants (OPAs) are widely added
in plastic
products and can be oxidized to generate oxidized derivatives (OPAs
= O), namely organic phosphate esters (OPEs), during production and
use processing. Herein, the occurrence of OPEs and OPAs in five plastic
food packages was detected by liquid chromatography–tandem
mass spectrometry. Three OPEs (TPhP, TCEP, and AO168 = O) and three
OPAs (TPhPi, TCEPi, and AO168) were found in the plastic packages,
with concentrations of 3OPAs)
and 196–831 ng/g (∑3OPEs), respectively.
The migration potential of OPAs and OPEs to food was measured by simulation
experiments. OPAs and OPEs in plastic can efficiently migrate to oily
simulants, alkaline simulants, and acidic simulants. After 14 days,
the total concentration of all OPAs and OPEs in the food simulants
reached 3OPAs + ∑3OPEs: 18.3–28.9 ng/mL) and
in oils (∑3OPAs + ∑3OPEs: 32.7–60.9
ng/mL). Accordingly, the estimated ingestion of OPAs and OPEs through
plastic-packaged food can reach 2.6 and 32.7 ng/kg in children and
1.1 and 6.5 ng/kg in adults, indicating a non-negligible exposure
risk of organic phosphorus pollutants.