Microplastics (MPs) have gained a high degree of public interest since they are associated with the global release of plastics into the environment. Various studies have confirmed the presence of MPs throughout the food chain. However, information on the ingestion of MPs via the consumption of many commonly consumed foods like dairy products are scarce due to the lack of studies investigating the “contamination” of this food group by MPs. This lack of occurrence data is mainly due to the absence of robust analytical methods capable of reliably quantifying MPs with size < 20 µm in foods. In this work, a new methodology was developed to accurately determine and characterize MPs in milk-based products using micro-Raman (μRaman) technology, entailing combined enzymatic and chemical digestion steps. This is the first time that the presence of relatively low amounts of small-sized MP (≥ 5 µm) have been reported in raw milk collected at farm just after the milking machine and in some processed commercial liquid and powdered cow’s milk products.
Using attenuated total reflection-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) spectroscopy, collaborating scientists in ten different laboratories measured (in duplicate) the total trans fat content of ten fat or oil test samples, two of which were blind duplicates. The procedure used entailed measuring the height of the negative second derivative of the IR absorption band at 966 cm -1 . This absorption is attributed to the C-H deformation vibration that is characteristic of isolated (non-conjugated) double bonds with the trans configuration. The precision of ATR-FTIR results in this international collaborative study was satisfactory and led to the approval of this validated procedure as official method AOCS Cd 14e-09 in late 2009. This official method is also suitable for analysis of total isolated trans fat and oil products containing, or supplemented with, trans conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) isomers. Although this method does not require derivatization of the oil or fat test materials, as required for GC, fats and oils in foods must be extracted with organic solvents before analysis. This method is also rapid (5 min) and does not require any weighing or quantitative dilution of unknown neat fat or oil test samples in any solvent. The AOCS Cd 14e-09 method is suitable for determination of test samples with zero trans fat, which is defined according to the US labeling regulations as 0.5 g trans fat per serving or 1.8% trans fat, as a percentage of total fat.
UV-SERS measurements offer a great potential for environmental
or food (detection of food contaminats) analytics. Here, the UV-SERS
enhancement potential of various kinds of metal colloids, such as
Pd, Pt, Au, Ag, Au–Ag core–shell, and Ag–Au core–shell
with different shapes and sizes, were studied using melamine as a
test molecule. The influence of different activation (KF, KCl, KBr,
K2SO4) agents onto the SERS activity of the
nanomaterials was investigated, showing that the combination of a
particular nanoparticle with a special activation agent is extremely
crucial for the observed SERS enhancement. In particular, the size
dependence of spherical nanoparticles of one particular metal on the
activator has been exploited. By doing so, it could be shown that
the SERS enhancement increases or decreases for increasing or decreasing
size of a nanoparticle, respectively. Overall, the presented results
demonstrate the necessity to adjust the nanoparticle size and the
activation agent for different experiments in order to achieve the
best possible UV-SERS results.
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