A sensitive spectrophotometric method for the determination of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) in foods is described. The method involves the reaction of EDTA with Fe3+ to produce the EDTA-Fe chelate, followed by the removal of excess of Fe3+ by a chelate extraction technique using chloroform and N-benzoyl-N-phenylhydroxylamine and the formation of a chromophore with 4,7-diphenyl-1,10-phenanthroline-disulfonic acid. The calibration graph was linear in the range 0.5-40.0 micrograms cm-3 of EDTA with a slope of 21.1. The relative standard deviation at 10 micrograms cm-3 of EDTA was 1.6% (n = 10). There was no interference from most of the common ingredients of commercial foods. More than 90% of EDTA added at two levels was recovered from real samples. The method was applied to the determination of EDTA in various foods, and the results obtained were compared with those given by high-performance liquid chromatography.
A simple spectrophotometric method for the determination of nitrite is described. Nitrite is measured enzymically through its reaction with nitrite reductase coupled with NADH. The entire enzymic procedure required 15 min to complete. The calibration curve was linear in the range 0.1-10 micrograms cm-3 nitrite with a slope of 6.25. The relative standard deviation at 5 microgram g-1 was 1.7% (n = 5). The method greatly simplifies the procedure of nitrite determination and enables the routine inspection of a number of samples with very little laboratory equipment. A comparison study showed that the method was superior to the GC method for samples containing large amounts of reducing substances while good agreement was achieved between both methods for other foods.
A simple spectrophotometric method for the determination of benzoic acid is described. Benzoic acid is measured enzymically through its reaction with benzoate 4-hydroxylase coupled with NADPH and O2. The entire enzymic procedure required 20 min to complete. The method greatly simplifies the procedure for benzoic acid determination and permits the routine inspection of a number of samples with very little laboratory equipment. The method was compared with HPLC and satisfactory agreement was achieved.
A rapid and specific method is described for the determination of nitrate in meat and fishery products.. Nitrate separated from foodsby extraction with 1/50 N sodium hydroxide and ultrafiltration was readily reduced to nitrite by the use of respiratory nitrate reductase (NR) from Escherichia coli K-12. The nitrite so obtained can be determined by the specific diazotation-coupling reaction method. The use of an enzymatic reaction resulted in quantitative reduction of nitrate, and the method was relatively free of interferences. Recoveries of 10 and 100 ppm of nitrate from 5 samples of meat and fishery products ranged from 92.8 to 97.8% for 10 ppm and 97.8 to 99.4% for 100 pprrl with a detection limit of 0.5 ppm.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.