| Literature DB >> 21423327 |
Svjetlana Luterotti, Dane Bicanic, Kristina Kljak, Darko Grbesa, Eduardo San Martin Martínez, Ruud Spruijt.
Abstract
This study describes the application of the laser photoacoustic spectroscopy (PAS) for quantification of total carotenoids (TC) in corn flours and sweetpotato flours. Overall, thirty-three different corn flours and nine sweetpotato flours were investigated. All PAS measurements were performed at room temperature using 488-nm argon laser radiation for excitation and mechanical modulation of 9 and 30 Hz. The measurements were repeated within a run and within several days or months. The UV-Vis spectrophotometry was used as the reference method. The concentration range that allows for the reliable analysis of TC spans a region from 1 to 40 mg kg(-1) for corn flours and from 9 to 40 mg kg(-1) for sweetpotato flours. In the case of sweetpotato flours, the quantification may extend even to 240 mg kg(-1) TC. The estimated detection limit values for TC in corn and sweetpotato flours were 0.1 and 0.3 mg kg(-1), respectively. The computed repeatability (n = 3-12) and intermediate precision (n = 6-28) RSD values at 9 and 30 Hz are comparable: 0.1-17.1% and 5.3-14.7% for corn flours as compared with 1.4-9.1% and 4.2-23.0% for sweetpotato flours. Our results show that PAS can be successfully used as a new analytical tool to simply and rapidly screen the flours for their nutritional potential based on the total carotenoid concentration.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21423327 PMCID: PMC3034893 DOI: 10.1007/s11483-010-9168-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Biophys ISSN: 1557-1858 Impact factor: 3.114
The distribution of grain size in several flours
| Flour code |
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| CF0 | 95.31 | 373.56 | 669.41 |
| 90.80a | 372.56a | 648.11a | |
| CF2 | 64.53 | 348.19 | 666.48 |
| CF4 | 13.61 | 99.96 | 275.67 |
| SPF1 | 11.58 | 28.65 | 67.43 |
| SPF2 | 13.13 | 78.94 | 378.23 |
First load, five runs
aSecond load, five runs
Fig. 1Particle size distribution of a yellow corn flour CF2 (18.12 mg kg−1 TC), b yellow corn flour CF4 (10.33 mg kg−1 TC), c sweetpotato flour SPF2 (38.8 mg kg−1 TC), and d sweetpotato flour SPF1 (0.3 mg kg−1 TC)
Fig. 2Verifying the performance of the instrumental setup for PA measurements using: carbon black CB (N = 14), corn flours CF1 (N = 15), CF2 (N = 10), CF3 (N = 14), and CF4 (N = 14). The following quantities have been plotted as a function of the logarithm of the modulation frequency f: a log PAS signalmax, b log β × μ. PAS data: 1–3 measurements; N number of frequency levels. Total carotenoid concentration in flours is 33.42 (for CF1), 18.12 (for CF2), 0.90 (for CF3), and 10.33 mg kg−1 (for CF4). Instrumental parameters: cw Ar-ion laser, incident laser power at 488 nm was 70-74 mW, integration time constant of lock-in amplifier was 1 s
Fig. 3The correlations between the hundredfold product β × μ obtained from PAS measurements and total carotenoid (TC) concentration estimated spectrophotometrically in 33 corn flours, concentration range 0.13–36.33 mg kg−1 TC (3–30 SP analyses per sample), PAS measurements performed within 1–3 different days; 9 Hz (triangles), 3–28 PAS measurements of a sample; 30 Hz (circles), 3–21 PAS measurements of a sample. b Eight sweetpotato flours, concentration range 0.3–238 mg kg−1 TC (1–3 SP analyses per sample); 9 Hz (triangles), 3–10 PAS measurements of a sample, 1–2 days; 30 Hz (circles), 3–10 PAS measurements of a sample, 1–3 different days. Mean ± SD values are presented. Instrumental parameters: cw Ar-ion laser, incident laser power at 488 nm was 70–74 mW, the integration constant of the lock-in amplifier was 1 s
Correlations, DL and RSD data for PAS measurements of corn flours and sweetpotato flours
DL detection limit (based on visual evaluation as the minimum concentration at which the analyte can be reliably detected), n number of independent PAS measurements (in parentheses), N number of sample points (in parentheses), R coefficient of correlation, RSS residual sum of the squares, TC total carotenoids expressed as β-carotene (mg kg−1)
Precision data is given for the whole concentration range investigated: awithin-a-run, bwithin 2–3 different days. Intermediate precision data for sweetpotato flours was collected throughout 4 days to 2 months within a run
cFor both 9 and 30 Hz