Loading...

LC-MS Samples & Sample Preparation Techniques

Date

Training Time

Training Duration

Training Cost (USD)

10th July, 2026
1830-2000 HRS (EAT)
1.5 Hours

$30

LC‑MS Sample Prep · modern course
Garbage in, signal out; the MS can only see what the sample delivers.
LC‑MS ANALYSTS SAMPLE PREP METHOD DEVELOPERS ISO 17025
  • Designed for: LC‑MS practitioners, method developers, and laboratory staff who need to prepare samples for robust, sensitive, and compliant LC‑MS analysis
  • Ideal for those working in pharmaceutical, environmental, food, or clinical laboratories
  • Prerequisite: basic understanding of liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry
  • Familiarity with sample handling and quality concepts is beneficial
Learning outcomes
  • Identify appropriate sample preparation techniques for LC‑MS across diverse matrices
  • Minimize matrix effects and ion suppression in MS detection
  • Ensure sample integrity, stability, and traceability for ISO/IEC 17025 compliance
  • Document sample preparation workflows, deviations, and corrective actions

LC‑MS SAMPLES AND SAMPLE PREPARATION TECHNIQUES

LIVE ONLINE INTERACTIVE SESSION · from collection to injection

The MS can only see what the sample delivers. This course provides a systematic approach to LC‑MS sample preparation – from protein precipitation and SPE to QuEChERS and derivatisation – ensuring robust, traceable, and audit‑ready workflows that minimise matrix effects and maximise sensitivity.

1. ROLE OF SAMPLE PREPARATION IN ISO/IEC 17025
  • Why sample preparation is critical: sensitivity, accuracy, reproducibility; reduces matrix interference/ion suppression; ensures sample integrity; prevents instrument contamination
  • Relevant ISO/IEC 17025 clauses: sample handling, storage, traceability; method validation; nonconforming work; technical competence
2. SYSTEMATIC APPROACH TO LC–MS SAMPLE PREPARATION
Structured workflow
  • Define matrix and analytes; identify interferences; select extraction/clean‑up (protein precipitation, SPE, LLE, QuEChERS, dilution); filter/centrifuge/concentrate; verify LC‑MS compatibility; document workflow
Trend‑based troubleshooting
  • Monitor ion suppression/enhancement, peak shape deterioration, sample stability
Risk‑based decision making
  • When to re‑prepare/re‑extract; when to reject a compromised sample; when matrix effects invalidate data
3. SAMPLE COLLECTION AND STORAGE
  • Collection guidelines: contamination‑free containers, avoid reactive plastics
  • Storage conditions: temperature, light protection, solvent compatibility
  • Stability considerations: short‑term vs long‑term, freeze‑thaw cycles
  • Labelling and traceability: unique IDs, chain‑of‑custody, audit‑ready documentation
4. COMMON SAMPLE PREPARATION TECHNIQUES
Protein Precipitation (PP)
  • For plasma, serum, protein‑rich matrices; solvents: ACN, MeOH, acidified; removes proteins causing fouling/ion suppression
Solid‑Phase Extraction (SPE)
  • Targeted clean‑up, concentration, fractionation; chemistries: C18, HLB, mixed‑mode, ion‑exchange; applications: environmental, food, pharmaceuticals
Liquid‑Liquid Extraction (LLE)
  • Selective partitioning into immiscible solvents; applications: non‑polar drugs, lipids, pesticides
QuEChERS
  • Multi‑residue analysis in complex matrices (food, feed); extraction, salt‑induced phase separation, dSPE clean‑up
Filtration and Centrifugation
  • Removal of particulates; use low‑binding, MS‑compatible filters
5. MATRIX CONSIDERATIONS AND MINIMIZING ION SUPPRESSION
  • Identify co‑eluting matrix components causing suppression/enhancement
  • Dilution, SPE, or HILIC to mitigate matrix effects
  • Evaluate using post‑column infusion or matrix‑matched calibration
6. SAMPLE DERIVATIZATION (IF APPLICABLE)
  • Convert analytes to MS‑friendly, detectable forms; common for small polar molecules or reactive compounds
  • Ensure complete reaction, minimal excess reagent; document conditions, reagents, safety
7. SAMPLE QUALITY CONTROL
  • Use Certified Reference Materials (CRMs) where possible
  • Spike/recovery studies to evaluate extraction efficiency
  • Include blanks, duplicates, QC standards in batches
  • Track sample handling, storage, preparation steps
8. ONLINE PRACTICAL COMPONENT
  • Interactive exercises: selecting appropriate preparation technique for complex matrices
  • Simulating protein precipitation, SPE, QuEChERS workflows
  • Evaluating chromatograms for matrix effect indications
  • Logging sample prep steps, deviations, corrective actions for ISO 17025 compliance
9. PREVENTIVE STRATEGIES
  • Use standardized protocols and SOPs
  • Pre‑check solvent and reagent quality
  • Filter and centrifuge before injection
  • Avoid repeated freeze‑thaw cycles
  • Maintain detailed sample preparation logs
10. SYSTEM SUITABILITY AND POST‑PREPARATION VERIFICATION
  • Evaluate recovery, reproducibility, MS response
  • Compare with reference standards or CRMs
  • Confirm absence of contaminants affecting MS sensitivity or column life
11. ISO/IEC 17025 DOCUMENTATION
  • Document method, deviations, rationale for preparation steps
  • Record QC outcomes and corrective actions
  • Trace sample lineage from collection to analysis
  • Maintain audit‑ready logs for sample integrity, storage, extraction
12. COMMON ISO/IEC 17025 NON‑CONFORMITIES (LC‑MS SAMPLE PREP)
  • Improper storage leading to analyte degradation
  • Incomplete documentation of sample preparation steps
  • Failure to assess matrix effects
  • Using incompatible solvents or filters with LC‑MS system

PP · SPE · LLE · QuEChERS Ion suppression mastery
Talk to Us