Title: chapter 8: Analysis of selected Vitamins, Minerals
1chapter 8 Analysis of selected Vitamins,
Minerals Non-nutritional additives
2Vitamin analysis
- Generally difficult to measure vitamin content of
food - chemically heterogeneous group of essential
micronutrients - present in very small amounts
- often unstable during analysis
- Bioassays using humans or animals
- Microbiological assays
- Physico-chemical assays
- titrimetric / spectrophotometric
- fluorimetry
- chromatographic
- enzymatic
3Example of a bioassay for the analysis of vitamins
- Vitamin D
- rats fed vit D depleted diet for 18-25 days
- groups of rats fed (8 to 11 days) known amounts
of vitamin D - other groups of rats fed food sample (8 to 11
days) being analysed - vitamin D potency of the sample is measured as
bone calcification level at end of tibia bone
compared to calcification in rats fed known
amount of vit D
4Example of a microbiological assay for vitamins
- Limited to water soluble vitamins
- Growth of specific microorganism in extract of
vitamin containing sample is compared with growth
of the microorganism in presence of known amounts
of the vitamin - Growth measure in terms of
- turbidity
- acid production
- gravimetry
- respiration
5Niacin microbiological assay procedure
- Sample dissolved autoclaved in 1N H2SO4
- Range of dilutions of sample extract made in
assay broth autoclave (1hr at 121C) - Range of niacin standards made in same way as
sample autoclave (10 min. at 121C) - Inoculated with Lactobacillus plantarum,
incubated 37oC for 16-18 hr - Measure turbidity by absorbance at any wavelength
between 540nm and 660nm. - Compare absorbance of sample incubations with
standards to calculate niacin content of
original sample
6HPLC analysis of vitamins- vitamin E (Tocopherols
Tocotrienols)
- Vitamin E is present in food as eight compounds
(?-?-?- and ?-) tocopherols and tocotrienols - In order to estimate the Vit E activity ?
tocopherol equivalent - quantification of each Vit E form is required
7Structure of vitamin E Tocopherols Tocotrienols
RI
RII
8- Method
- saponify
- mix with 6 (wt/vol) pyrogallol in ethanol, heat
at 70C sonicate - add 60 KOH solution digest at 70C sonicate
- extract with hexane
- filter inject into normal phase HPLC
- use florescence detector at 290 and 330 nm
- quantify by external standard from peak area by
linear regression
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10Example of a titrimetric analysis of vitamins
- 2, 6-Dichloroindophenol (DCPIP or DPIP)
titrimetric method for ascorbic acid - Sample homogenised in metaphosphoric acetic acid
solution - Filtered and diluted
- Standard solutions of ascorbic acid prepared
- Standards and samples titrated to pink endpoint
with dichloroindophenol dye - mg ascorbic acid/ml sample C x V x (DF / WT)
- C mg ascorbic acid/mL dye
- V ml of dye used for titration of diluted
sample - DF dilution factor
- WT sample wgt, g
11Example of fluorimetric analysis of vitamins
- Fluorometric thiamin (vitamin B1) determination
- sample and standards dissolved in HCl
- enzymatic hydrolysis of phosphate esters of
thiamin - sample clean up using ion exchange cartridge
- converte thiamin to thiachrome using potassium
ferrocyanide - immiscible isobutyl alcohol added, shaken and
left to separate into two layers - isobutyl alcohol upper layer now containing
thiochrome decanted off into fluorescence tube - fluorescence measured (at 365-435nm) compared
to standard solutions
12Comparison of methods used for vitamin analysis
- Bioassays
- extremely time consuming
- dont necessarily require preparation of an
extract - limited to animals rather than humans
- Microbiological
- limited to water extractable vitamins
- require vitamin extraction but less sample
preparation than physicochemical assays - not necessarily measure of bioavailability in
humans - Physicochemical (require vit. Extraction)
- relatively simple, accurate precise
- can involve high capital outlay (ie HPLC)
- establishing the peak identity is essential
13ASH ANALYSIS
- Ash inorganic residue remaining after either
ignition or complete oxidation of organic matter
in a foodstuff - dry ashing (proximate analysis)
- whole grain, cereals and dried vegetables
- wet ashing (oxidation, preparation for elemental
analysis) - meat and meat products
- microwave (low temperature ashing)
- volatile elements
- Ash content of fresh food is rarely gt5
14Dry ashing
- Sample (5-10 g) weighed into
crucible and pre-prepared - Ignited in muffle furnace 12-18 hr, 550oC
- water volatiles vapourised
- organic substances oxidised to water vapour,
carbon dioxide, and oxides of nitrogen - minerals converted to oxides, sulphates,
phosphates, chlorides and silicates - some elements may be partially lost through
volatilisation eg. Fe, Se, Pb, Hg - Cool furnace and open door carefully as ash may
be fluffy - Cool in desiccator and calculate ash weight as
percentage of original sample
15Wet ashing
- Wet oxidising of organic substances
- Place 1g dried sample of food in H2SO4 HNO3
- Heated to 200?C on hot plate in fume-hood
brown-yellow fume will evolve - sample should become colourless
- Cool and transfer oxidised food solution to 50 mL
volumetric flask - Make to volume with ultra pure water
- Follow wash down procedure for fume-hood
16Microwave ashing
- Totally automated
- May carry out dry or wet ashing
- Wet ashing is preformed in open or closed vessels
(Teflon, quartz or Pyrex) which withstand
pressures of gt1500psi - acids may be heated past their boiling point
- ensures complete digestion in 30 min.
- permits use of nitric acid when normally we would
require sulfuric acid
17- Time, temperature, pressure microwave power
parameters are adjustable - may ramp the temperature according to
preprogramming - Dry ashing may reach up to 1200C
- uses the same protocol and crucibles as muffle
furnace ashing - generally 20 min. in a microwave oven is equal to
4hr in a muffle furnace
18Analysis of specific minerals
- Flame photometry and atomic absorbtion
spectroscopy - EDTA complexation titration
- Redox reactions
- Precipitation titration
- Colorimetric methods
- Ion selective electrodes
19Contamination
- Milling and grinding with steel grinders
- Old glassware can contaminate samples for
micro-elemental analysis - glass is acid washed triple rinsed with ultra
pure water - Solvents including water may contain high amounts
of minerals - need pure reagents high in cost
- run reagent blank
20EDTA complexometric titration
- Formation of stable complexes of metal ions with
ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) - except alkali metals (Na)
- Via the presence of donor oxygen and nitrogen
atoms EDTA is able to form six, five member
chelate rings
21Water hardness - EDTA titration
- Adjust water sample pH to 10 by adding buffer
solution (NH4OH Na2EDTA MgCl2) and Calmagite
indicator solution - Titrate with 0.01 EDTA to a blue endpoint
- This method is suitable to assess Ca in ashed
fruits and vegetables
22- Add magnesium salt and enough EDTA to bind all
magnesium. - In buffer solution the Ca replaces the Mg bound
to the EDTA. - The free magnesium binds to Calmagite,
- pink magnesium Calmagite complex persists until
all Ca in the sample has been titrated with the
EDTA. - Excess EDTA removes Mg from Clamagite and
produces a blue endpoint
23Redox reactions for mineral measurement
- Revision!
- oxidation
- addition of oxygen OR removal of hydrogen
- removal of electrons increase in positive
charge - reduction
- removal of oxygen OR addition of hydrogen
- addition of electrons reduction in positive
charge
24Iron determination using redox reaction and
colorimetry
- Food sample dried and ashed
- Dissolve ash in HCl and filter with rinsing
- Add aliquot of filtrate containing iron to
solution of hydroxylamine hydrochloride - Add acetate buffer and colour developing reagent
such as 0.1 orthophenanthroline - Dilute and read absorbance of colour at 510 nm
- To calculate iron content compare absorbance of
sample to standard curve generated by known
concentrations of iron chloride - prepared by dissolving analytical grade iron
wire in HCl
25Precipitation (Mohr) titration analysis of salt
in butter
- Mohr titration Based on formation of an orange
coloured solid, silver chromate after silver from
silver nitrate has complexed with all available
chloride - AgNo3 NaCl ? AgCl (Cl- is complexed) NaNo3
- 2AgCl K2CrO4 ? Ag2CrO4 (orange all Cl- is
complexed) 2KCl - butter is melted in boiling water in a conical
flask - potassium chromate solution is added
- titrated with silver nitrate until an orange
brown colour persists for 30 sec - exact normality of silver nitrate solution
standardised against known amount of potassium
chloride - salt in food calculated from concentration
titration volume of standardised silver nitrate
26Colorimetric assay for phosphorous
- Sample of food is ashed
- Add HCl and nitric acid
- Heat to dissolved ash, cool and make up to volume
in water - Add 20 ml of molybdovanadate reagent to aliquot
of ash solution - After colour development (10 min.) due to
formation of phosphomolybdovanadate - read absorbance at 400 nm
- To calculate phosphorus content compare
absorbance of sample to standard curve generated
by known concentrations of potassium dihydrogen
phosphate
27Ion-selective electrodes
- Similar concept to pH electrodes that measure H
ions can be applied to other ions and even
dissolved gases - Chemical composition of glass in electrode is one
means of making electrodes sensitive to specific
ions - 71 SiO2, 11 Na2O and 18 Al2O3 for K
- A typical glass membrane sodium indicating
electrode operates in the range of 1 - 10-6 M - Usually develop a calibration curve of electrode
potential (millivolts) developed in standard
solutions - plot on semilog paper electrode potential vs
logarithms of the standard concentrations
28Preservatives - Sulphur dioxide
- When sulphur dioxide or sulphur salts are
dissolved in water an equilibrium between sulphur
dioxide and a range of ions is established as
follows - SO2 H20 ? H2SO3 ? H HSO3- ?
H SO32- - sulphur sulphurous acid
bisulphite sulphite - dioxide
29Sulphur dioxide determination
- Pale coloured liquid foods or foods that can be
dispersed in water - digest food with cold alkali (pH 13),
- acidify to produce un-dissociated sulphurous acid
- sulphur dioxide reacts with standard iodine
solution - SO2 I2 2H2O 2I- 2H H2SO4
I 2 - excess iodine reacts with starch to give a dark
blue endpoint - Foods not easily dispersed in water or intensely
coloured - distilling of sulphur dioxide from the acidified
food - titrating the colourless sulphur dioxide directly
with standard iodine solution as it distills over
30Nitrates and nitrites
- Levels of nitrites (NO2) nitrates (NO3) in
foods are controlled by international regulation - have the potential to form toxic nitrosamines and
to interfere with infant metabolism - Aqueous extraction of the food
- to reduce nitrate loss, pH of extract is gt5
- De-proteinisation of the extract at the
isoelectric point of the contaminating proteins
followed by filtration
31 - Extracted nitrates reduced to nitrites by
nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide phosphate
(NADPH) in the presence of the enzyme nitrate
reductase - Nitrate NADPH ? nitrite NADP H2O
- The nitrites originally present in the sample
plus those converted from nitrates converted to a
diazo dye - Nitrite sulphanilamide NED diazo dye
- Level of dye can then be determined
colorimetrically with reference to a standard
curve - Nitrite and nitrates in food calculated as nitrite
32Hunter L, a, b system for quantifying colour of
foods
- Concept of a 3D colour space or colour sphere
- Vertical coordinate (L)
- L 0 represents black
- L 100 represents white
- Horizontal coordinate (a)
- the more negative value the more green
- zero grey
- the more positive value the more red
- Horizontal coordinate (b)
- the more negative value the more blue
- zero grey
- the more positive value the more yellow