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Title: Chapter 3 : Key techniques in chemical analysis of food


1
Chapter 3 Key techniques in chemical analysis
of food
2
Classical methods
  • Titrimetric analysis
  • Gravimetric procedure
  • Solvent extraction
  • Refractometry

3
Titrimetric assay
  • Volume of a solution of known concentration
    (standard) required to completely react with a
    solution (food) of unknown concentration
  • Stoichiometric point
  • estimated by change in colour of indicator
    chemical
  • Acid-base titrations
  • Redox titrations
  • Precipitation titrations

4
Acid-base titration's
  • Measure of Titratable Acidity (TA) of milk by
    using standard sodium hydroxide in the presence
    of (0.5) phenolphthalein (dye).
  • CH3CH(OH)COOH NaOH ? CH3CH(OH)COONa H2O
  • endpoint faint pink colour (pH 8.5)
  • The actual point of colour change known as the
    end point may not represent the stoichiometric
    point (titration error)

5
Titratable acidity apparatus
Nielsen, 2003 p219
6
Redox titration
  • Two half reactions one reduction, one oxidation
  • Example determination of sulphur dioxide in
    foods
  • sulphur dioxide is oxidised and iodine
    reduced SO2 H2O ? SO3 2H 2e-
  • SO3 H2O ? H2SO4
  • I2 2e- ? 2I-
  • Summary SO2 I2 2H2O ? 2I- 2H H2SO4
  • end point starch indicator is purple colour

7
Precipitation titrations
  • Determine salt in cheese and butter
  • Reaction of salt in food with standard silver
    nitrate
  • AgNO3 NaCl ? AgCl NaNO3
  • Un-reacted AgNO3 is titrated with potassium
    thiocyanate using Fe3 salt as indicator
  • AgNO3 KCNS ? AgCNS KNO3
  • endpoint silver ions react with the Fe3
    indicator to produce reddish-brown precipitate
    when all salt has reacted

8
Gravimetric procedures
  • Weight of food constituent is measured after
    appropriate treatment
  • moisture
  • ash
  • total dietary fiber

9
Solvent extraction methods
  • Constituents of food extracted by non-polar
    solvents
  • used for fat content determination
  • solvent separated
  • solvent removed
  • residue weighed

10
Instrumental modern approaches to food analysis
- spectroscopic methods
  • Interaction between electromagnetic radiation and
    atoms or molecules in food
  • Measure radiation emitted or absorbed
  • absorption based on Beer-Lambert Law amount of
    light absorbed by a solution is proportional to
    the concentration and length of the solution

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11
Spectrophotometric error corrections
Error Reduce or eliminated error
Radiation reflected absorbed by sample holder Use cuvettes of appropriate quality
Sample solvent may absorb radiation Use blank sample
Sample may associate or disassociate None
Wavelength of incident light not strictly monochromatic Set wavelength to that of maximum absorption

12
)
  • Radiation is energy that contains both electrical
    magnetic properties, therefore electromagnetic
  • ultraviolet 10 - 400 nm
  • ultraviolet spectroscopy
  • visible 400 - 700 nm
  • visible spectroscopy

13
Colorimetry (absorptimoter)
  • Efficiency of milk pasteurization
  • substrate hydrolyses (alkaline phosphate enzyme)
    to a yellow end product

14
uv/visible spectrophotometry (cont)
  • Phosphorus determination
  • reacting with ammonium molybdate to produce
    yellow colour
  • Reducing sugar determination
  • reacting with dinitrosalicylic acid to produce
    reddish brown colour

15
Infra-red spectrophotometry
  • Absorbtion of radiation (2500-15000 nm) at
    specific wavelengths
  • by bonds in compounds due to molecular vibrations
  • at correct frequency transition occurs from the
    ground state to vibrational excited state
  • radiation absorbed is proportional to the number
    of similar bonds vibrating
  • Sample tested may be opaque solid

16
Infra-red spectrophotometry-Mid infra-red
instruments
  • Used for routine analysis of large numbers of
    samples of one type of food eg. milk
  • 3480 nm for fat (CH2)groups
  • 5723 nm for fat (CO) groups
  • 6465 nm for protein (N-H) groups
  • 9610 nm for lactose (C-OH) groups
  • 4300 nm for water (H-O-H) groups
  • calibration of equipment is required using data
    from standard analysis methods

17
Infra-red spectrophotometry-Near infra-red
instruments
  • Near infra-red (NIR) 800-2500 nm
  • absorbtivity 10-1000 times less than mid
    infra-red bands
  • penetrate deeper giving more representative
    sample
  • complex calibration is required using
    sophisticated statistical techniques
  • of particular importance in the wheat industry
    for measurement of grain hardness, protein and
    moisture levels

18
Pertin NIR
  • Pour
  • Strike off excess
  • Place dish
  • Press Analyze
  • Results in 6 seconds

19
Fluorimetry
  • Compounds first absorb UV light and then
    immediately re-emit light at a longer wavelength
  • Electrons excited from low energy levels to
    higher then decay to an intermediate
  • Used to measure florescent and florescent
    derivative food components such as riboflavin and
    thiamin respectively
  • used with chromatographic methods such as high
    performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)

20
Flame photometry
  • Alkali metals heated in flame produce
    characteristic colour (Lithium, Na and K)
  • Electrons excited to higher energy wavelengths
    and release energy as light when they fall back
    to lower levels
  • Can be used to quantify nutritionally important
    alkali earth metals (Ca, Br Mg)
  • Number of elements estimated is limited due
    to lack of sensitivity

21
Atomic absorption spectrophotometry (AAS)
  • Atoms of metal in atomised sample absorb energy
    from radiation at characteristic excitation
    wavelengths
  • Reduction in intensity of applied radiation is
    proportional to the concentration of the element
    present

22
Atomic absorption spectrophotometer
23
Chromatography
  • A separation technique to identify and quantify
    chemical components based on interaction between
  • the mixture to be separated known as sample or
    solute
  • a solid phase known as stationary phase (eg.
    paper, thin-layer or column)
  • a mobile phase known as the solvent

24
General categories of chromatographic methods
  • Planar chromatography
  • paper chromatography
  • thin layer chromatography (TLC)
  • Column chromatography
  • gas chromatography (GC)
  • liquid high performance liquid chromatography
    (LC HPLC)

25
Separation principles
  • The principle approaches to separation of solute
    are
  • Adsorption onto adsorbent polar solid phase
    (silica alumina) using non-polar solvent
  • Partition onto inert solid phase by solubility in
    mixture of polar and non-polar solvents
  • Ion-exchange by ionic constituents on ionic solid
    phase (silica polystyrene) in aqueous buffer
  • Gel filtration by size and shape through hydrated
    gel in aqueous solvent

26
Paper Thin Layer Chromatography (TLC)
  • Liquid-solid adsorption chromatography
  • Paper uses vicinal water bound to cellulose as
    hydrophilic stationary phase
  • TLC uses wide range of materials to separate by
    any of the afore mentioned separation principles
  • thin layer of sorbent (silica gel alumina) bound
    to an inert support such as glass plates
  • Separated components identified characterised
    by Rf values
  • Rf distance moved by component
  • distance moved by solvent

27
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28
Gas chromatography
Nielsen, 2003 p486
29
Gas chromatography
  • Important especially for fat and oil analysis
  • Gas mobile phase nitrogen or helium flowing
    through a heated insulated column at from 60?C to
    over 200?C
  • Capillary column (few mm in diameter and many
    meters in length) contains stationary phase
    (silicon)

30
Detectors for GC
  • Flame ionisation detector
  • detector adds H2 to column effluent
  • mixture passes through jet and burned in air
  • generates ions and free electrons
  • produces current flow between 2 electrodes that
    is proportional to the amount of material present

31
Liquid chromatography-Normal-phase
reverse-phase HPLC
  • Used to analyse sugars, lipids, vitamins,
    preservatives and antioxidants
  • combination of separation methods
  • partition, gel-filtration, ion exchange
  • detection by
  • refractive index sugars
  • UV absorbance detectors preservative,
    antioxidants
  • Normal or straight phase
  • polar stationary phase, non-polar mobile phase
  • Reverse-phase (higher use)
  • non-polar stationary phase, polar mobile phase

32
Liquid chromatography
)
33
Electrophoresis
  • Based on principal that ions are attracted to
    electrode of opposite charge in an electric field
  • Can separate mixture of components into bands by
    their relative attraction to anode and cathode
  • Separation depends on relative anionic or
    cationic nature of components
  • Strongly influenced by pH and ionic strength of
    separation medium

34
Electrophoresis (1 Dimension)
35
What affects protein movement in electrophoresis
  • Protein positive / negative charge
  • protein is negatively charged if solution pH is
    above its pI, a protein is positively charged if
    solution pH is below its pI.
  • The higher the voltage and stronger the charge on
    the protein, the greater the migration within the
    filed
  • Molecular size and shape (stokes radius) affect
    migration distance within gel
  • smaller matrix pore size will decrease mobility

36
Immunochemical methods of food analysis
  • Based on reversible and non-covalent binding of
    antigen to antibody
  • Rapid, low cost, easy, accurate, sensitive, only
    require small sample, no special equipment
    required
  • Best known is Enzyme-Linked Immuno-Sorbent Assay
    (ELISA)
  • competitive (two antigens one antibody)
  • non-competitive (two antibodies one antigen)

37
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38
Competitive ELISA
  • Walls of multi-well test plate coated with
    competitive antigen
  • Antibody with bound enzyme and sample to be
    analysed added
  • During incubation antibody can bind either
  • to competitive antigen on walls of test plate OR
  • to antigen in sample
  • Increase antigen in sample leads to
  • increased binding of antibody to sample antigen
  • decreased binding of antibody to competitive
    antigen on well walls

39
Competitive ELISA (cont)
  • Wells rinsed out leaving only competitive antigen
    / antibody complex on well walls
  • Colour developed by adding enzyme substrate to
    well then measured spectrophotometrically
  • Colour produced proportional to antigen content
    of sample
  • ? antigen in sample ? ? colour intensity
  • ? antigen in sample ? ? colour intensity

40
Enzymatic determination of food
components-glucose as an example
  • Starch gelatnisation
  • Starch solution hydrolysed by ?-amylase
  • Gluco-amylase converts fragments into glucose
  • Glucose specifically oxidised by enzyme glucose
    oxidase to produce hydrogen peroxide
  • glucose oxidase
  • ?-D-glucose 02
    ?-gluconolactone H2O2

41
Enzymatic determination of food
components-glucose as an example
  • In presence of second enzyme, peroxidase, the
    hydrogen peroxide produced reacts with the dye
    ?-diansidine to produce yellow colour
  • peroxidase
  • H2O2 ?-diansidine dye
    H20 oxidised dye
  • (colourless)
    (yellow colour)

42
Enzymatic determination of food
components-glucose as an example
  • Absorbance read at 420 nm
  • Glucose standard curve used to estimate glucose
    content of sample
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