Title: Chapter 11 Vitamins Analysis
1 Chapter 11 Vitamins Analysis
2Introduction
- 1. What is vitamins?
- VITAMIN VITA (LIFE)-AMINE
- 2. Vitamins classification
- Hydrosoluble vitamins B, C,
- Liposoluble Vitamins A, D, E, K
- 3. Vitamins and health
-
3Vitamins determination
- The general techniques for determining vitamins
can be used for biological liquids and plant or
animal tissues. The general principles are the
same, but the extraction methods differ depending
on the matter being analyzed. For many decades,
the determination of vitamins has been based on
the evolution of diverse technologies from
microbiological methods to more sophisticated
techniques like liquid or gaseous phase
chromatography coupled with specific detection
systems(ultraviolet or fluorimetric). - The real problem at present is no longer the
methods of determination rather, it is
extraction procedures. The current change in
legislation that permits vitamin supplement food
substances necessitates constant analytical
control, and underlines the importance of the
methods for determining these vitamins.
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5Global Extraction Tech for Liposoluble Vitamins
Add 10 ml of 33 KOH and 40 ml ethanol
Weigh proper amount of the food substance and
transfer to a 150 ml round flask
Cool very rapidly, then add 17 ml of 25 HCl, and
cool again
Boil at reflux for 30 mins
Add 50 ml of petroleum ether and shake vigorously
for 3 mins
Wait to obtain complete separation of the two
phases
Evaporate to dry in a vacuum at a temperature of
35 degree C
Remove and filter the organic phase through
anhydrous sodium phases
Redissolve the residue with a know volume of
hexane for HPLC analysis
6Extraction of Vitamin A
- 1. Weigh 5-10 g of the previously crushed food
substance into a 1 L round flask. - 2. Add 20 ml of a 50 NaOH solution and warm the
mixture in a water bath. - 3. Then, add 100 ml of diethyl alcohol and 2 ml
of a hydroquinone solution that was obtained by
dissolving 20 g in 100 ml of pure alcohol. - 4. Maintain the water bath at 90? for 30 minutes.
- 5. Pour the contents of the round flask into a
decanting vial and add 100 ml of water. - 6. Add 50 ml of ethylic ether and shake.
- 7. Add 50 ml of petroleum ether. Shake and allow
it to decant. - 8. Extract once or twice with 50 ml of petrol
ether. - 9. Wash the ether phase three times with 100 ml
of water. - 10. Filter, evaporate, and concentrate until 1 ml
is obtained. -
- It must be noted that all of these steps are
conducted away from light. - Moreover, saponification with NaOH is not useful
with nonfatty products.
7Extraction of Vitamin D2 or D3
1. Weigh between 5 and 10 g of the sample food
substance. 2. Add 1 g of pyropanol, 90 ml of a
mixture of 60 ml absolute ethanol, and 30 ml of a
50 potash solution. 3. Extract three times, each
time with 50 ml of petroleum ether. 4. Wash the
ether extract and material three times with
water. 5. Filter, evaporate, and concentrate
until 1 ml is obtained. Saponification with the
alcoholic potash mixture is not necessary if the
products to be analyzed do not contain fats.
8Extract of Vitamin E
- 1. Weigh between 5 and 10 g of the food substance
that you crush. - 2. Add 100 ml of ascorbic acid methanol solution
obtained by mixing 0.5 g of ascorbic acid, 4 ml
of water, and 20 ml of ethanol brought to 100 ml
with methanol. - 3. Keep in boiling water for 15-20 minutes.
- Add 15 ml of a 70 KOH solution Place
again in the water bath for 40 minutes. - 4. Decant the contents of the flask into a
separation flask vial, washing the flask with 50
ml of water. - 5. Add 120 ml of ethylic ether and stir the
mixture. Decant and filter on Na2SO4. - 6. Extract again with 120 ml of ethyl ether.
- 7. Filter, evaporate, and concentrate to 1 ml.
- Saponification with potash is not
necessary for nonfat products.
9Other Extraction Techniques
- Other Extraction Techniques Specific to Each
Liposoluble Vitamin and the Product Being
Analyzed - These techniques are detailed in the official
analysis methods proposed by the Official
Association of Analytical Chemists (OAAC).
10Determination Methods
- Numerous determination techniques can be
proposed - ? determination by fluorimetry and by
colorimetry - ? determination by liquid phase chromatography,
with ultraviolet or fluorimetric detection - ? determination by gas phase chromatography
(vitamin E) - ? microbiological determination.
11Determination of Vitamin A
- After extraction, the determination is carried
out on the solvent of the liquid extraction. - Colorimetric Determination
- Through this method, carotenoids and vitamin A
are determined. - Determination of carotenoids.
- Carotenoids are determined at 450 nm. After
evaporating the ether phase of the extracted
solution, dissolved the extraction with 1 ml of
hexane. Determine the O.D. of this phase at 450
nm. - Determination of vitamin A.
- The hexane phase obtained earlier is taken
again and concentrated in a vacuum. Redissolve
the extract in a chloroform. Then, to the volume
of chloroform, add four volumes of the
trifluoroacetic acid reagent prepared by mixing 1
v of trifluoroacetic acid with three volumes of
chloroform. Then, observe the DO at 620 nm
12Determination of Vitamins D
- Determination of Vitamins D2,D3,and Their
Metabolites - If the sample contains all the vitamian D
metabolites, then you can carry out a liquid
chromatography under the following conditions - Column fatty acid
analysis column - Solvent MeCN
(acetonitrile), 55 - Mixture of
water/acetic acid - (4 ml of
acetic per liter) 45 - Flow rate 1 ml/min
- Wavelength 265 nm
- Solvent temperature 25?
- Temperature of oven 40?
13Determination of Vitamin E
- A number of methods can be used to determine this
vitamin. - 1. Colorimetric Determination
- After extraction and evaporation,
re-dissolve the residue using n-heptane. Add 1 ml
of dipyridil solution, then determine the
absorbance at 460 nm. Methods derived from this
one have been recommended for use with ferric
chloride with a reading at 510 nm. - 2. Determination by Liquid Chromatography
- Using the extract prepared as described
earlier, proceed with an HPLC determination under
the following conditions - Column Lichrosorb R P
8,25 cm , 4.6 mm, 5 µm - Solvent methanol/water
(928) - Flow rate 1.5 ml/min
- Wavelength 288 nm
- Solvent temperature 25?
- Temperature of oven 40?
- For some foods, all three vitamins (A, D,
E) can be determined, or only vitamins A and
E simultaneously.
14Extraction of Hydrosoluble Vitamins
- 1. General principle is that the sample must be
crashed as finely as possible. - 2. Enzymatic extraction is conducted with
amylolytic or proteolytic enzymes.
15Tech of extracting the ensemble of hydrosoluble
vitamins
Weigh 5-10 g sample into a 250 ml flask and add
65 ml 0.1 M HCl
homogenize the sample after crushing it finely
and rapidly (if necessary)
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Heat at 100 deg C for 30 mins in a water bath
Cool and adjust to pH4.5 with 2.5 M NaOAc
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Add 50mg ß-amylase and 50 mg takadiastase,
incubate at 37 oven for overnight
Decant quantitatively into a 100 ml volumetric
flask and adjust volume with water
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Filter the supernatant and do further treatment
to the filtrate if necessary
16Ascorbic Acid Extraction
- 1. In a breaker weigh to about 0.1 mg of a
certain product quantity as a function of the
assumed vitamin C content of the sample food
substance. - 2. Decant into a 50 ml volumetric flask using
0.4 metaphosphoric acid. - 3. Bring the volume to 50 ml with this solution.
- . For the analysis of a liquid, pippet the
sample directly into the flask and adjust the
volume to 50 ml with the 0.4 metaphosphoric acid
solution. - 4. Filter the solution an a cellulose acetate
membrane (0.2 µg), then pass the filtered
substance through a SEP-PAK C18 cartridge
(supplied by Waters, a division of Millipore).
Eliminate the first 2 ml, then collect 5 ml for
analysis by RP-HPLC. - (Note It must be pointed out that some
authors may propose a determination of ascorbic
and dehydro-L-sacorbic acids for which the
extraction technique is different from the
preceding one).
17Determination of Water Soluble Vitamins
- 1. Determination of Vitamin B1 Thiamine
- 1.1 Fluorimetric Determination
- After the action of potassium
ferricyanide in the presence of potash, determine
fluorescence using a 360-365 nm primary filter
and a 460-480 nm secondary filter. - 1.2 Microbiological Determination
- A number of lactobacilli can be used,
such as Lactobacillus fermentum and Lactobacillus
viridiceus ATCC 1270 C, depending on the chemical
methods of determination. The statistical
calculation of activity is based on the six-point
method. - 1.3 Determination by Liquid Chromatography
- Chromatographic conditions
- Column C 18, 25 cm 4.6
mm, 5µm - Solvent methanol
- 0.005 M sodium
acetate - adjusted to 4.5 pH
(30-70) - Flow rate 1 ml/min
- Detection excitation 366
nm -
emission 435 nm
18 Principle of NP-C and RP-C
Reverse phase chromatography
Normal phase chromatography
19- So much for this lesson
- and see you next time !