| Literature DB >> 26604926 |
Showkat Ahmad Bhawani1, Sim Siong Fong1, Mohamad Nasir Mohamad Ibrahim2.
Abstract
The nature of caffeine reveals that it is a bitter white crystalline alkaloid. It is a common ingredient in a variety of drinks (soft and energy drinks) and is also used in combination with various medicines. In order to maintain the optimum level of caffeine, various spectrophotometric methods have been developed. The monitoring of caffeine is very important aspect because of its consumption in higher doses that can lead to various physiological disorders. This paper incorporates various spectrophotometric methods used in the analysis of caffeine in various environmental samples such as pharmaceuticals, soft and energy drinks, tea, and coffee. A range of spectrophotometric methodologies including chemometric techniques and derivatization of spectra have been used to analyse the caffeine.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26604926 PMCID: PMC4641934 DOI: 10.1155/2015/170239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Anal Chem ISSN: 1687-8760 Impact factor: 1.885
Figure 1Structure of caffeine.
Different spectrophotometric methods for the determination of caffeine.
| S. number | Method | Linearity range for caffeine | UV-vis spectral range | Sample | Solution | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Chemometric methods for spectral investigation | 12–56 | 225–285 nm | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 M HCl | [ |
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| 2 | Simple and derivative spectrophotometry | 12–28 | 200–350 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water, chloroform, and petroleum ether | [ |
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| 3 | Derivative ratio spectra-zero crossing procedure | 1–5 | 244.8–276.9 nm | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 M HCl | [ |
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| 4 | Ratio spectra spectrophotometry and chemometric methods viz, classical least squares, and inverse least squares | 4–40 | 225–285 nm | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 M HCl | [ |
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| 5 | Multivariate calibration and N-way partial least squares (PLS) | 2–6 | 210–300 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water | [ |
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| 6 | Multivariate calibration method and chemometric methods viz, partial least squares, and principle component regression |
.05–20 | 190–300 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water/methanol (1 : 1, v/v) | [ |
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| 7 | Continuous wavelet transform and derivative transform (using Savitzky-Golay filters) | 2–50 | 220–300 | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 M HCl | [ |
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| 8 | H-point standard addition method | 0.1–3.0 | 453 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water | [ |
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| 9 | Simultaneous equation method and Q-absorbance equation at isosbestic point | 2–32 | 200–400 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water | [ |
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| 10 | Isoabsorption assay method | — | 200–300 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Water | [ |
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| 11 | Simultaneous equation method and absorbance ratio method | 0–25 | 200–400 nm | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 N NaOH | [ |
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| 12 | Simultaneous equation method and absorbance ratio method | 1.14–2.05 | 200–400 nm | Pharmaceuticals | 0.1 N HCl | [ |
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| 13 | Partial least squares regression, genetic algorithm coupled with PLS, and principle component-artificial neural network | 1–18 | 200–400 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Methanol/0.1 N HCl (3 : 1, v/v) | [ |
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| 14 | Simple spectrophotometric method with coupling reagent | 0.1–1 | 500–750 nm | Alkaloids (caffeine and theophylline) | Water | [ |
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| 15 | First-derivative spectrophotometry | 4–40 | 220–360 nm | Pharmaceuticals | Ethanol | [ |
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| 16 | Derivative spectrophotometric methods (first, second, and third-order spectra) | 2–10 | 190–350 nm | Beverages (caffeine) | Water | [ |
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| 17 | Simple spectrophotometric method | 5–25 | 271 nm |
| Sulfuric acid (2.5%) | [ |
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| 18 | Simple spectrophotometric method (Solvent study) | 0–20 | 180–400 nm | Tea (caffeine) | Water, ethyl acetate, chloroform, and methanol | [ |
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| 19 | UV-spectrophotometry | 10–60 | 200–600 | Soft and energy drinks (caffeine) | Carbon tetrachloride | [ |
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| 20 | Simple spectrophotometric method | 10–50 | 200–400 nm | Drugs (caffeine) | Water | [ |
Figure 2Spectrum of caffeine.