Both types of colouring matter natural as well as synthetic are
used in dairy products. Natural colours like b-carotene and annatto are
preferred or synthetic colors. Methods, for testing of both types of colours
are given below.
A.
Natural Coloring Matters
i)
â-Carotene
Carotene is widely distributed in nature. It is an unsaturated
hydrocarbon. It occurs in nature in three isomeric forms, a, â and g, out of which
â-carotene is available in pure form and is also manufactured synthetically.
Assaying
purity of â-carotene : Weigh
accurately about 0.1 g of the dried sample and dissolve it in 100 ml of
cyclohexane. Dilute the solution, stem-wise, to a final concentration of
approx. 0.2 mg per 100 ml of cyclohexane. Measure the extinction of the
resulting solution in a 1 cm cell at 456 nm.
Calculation
Purity, % by mass = (E*1000*100)/ 2441 W
Where
E = observed extinction, and
W= exact concentration of â-carotene in mg per 100 ml of
cyclohexane in the final solution for extinction reading.
ii)
Annatto Colour
Annatto colour is obtained from the aril (seed coat) of the
plant Bixa orellana.Its solution in oil is used for colouring butter while its
solution in water with a little alkali is used for colouring cheese and other
similar products.
Assaying
purity of Annatto
Annatto
Extract in oil : Transfer 0.1 to 1 g of the
sample, accurately weighed into a 100 ml volumetric flask. Dissolve in
chloroform, dilute to volume with chloroform, and mix. Transfer a 1 ml portion
of the solution into another 100 ml volumetric flask and dilute to 100 ml.
Measure the absorbance A of this solution at 470 nm.
Total
carotenoids, % by mass(expressed as bixin) = (A*1000*100)/ 2.826 mass of sample (mg) 100
Water
Soluble Annatto : Weigh accurately 0.1 to 1 g
of the sample, add 0.01N sodium hydroxide to 100 ml, and shake thoroughly.
Transfer 1 ml portion of the solution into a separating funnel, add 10 ml of
sodium hydroxide solution ( 1 in 10) and water to 50 ml, and add 2 ml of
diluted sulphuric acid. Continue to extract the solution with each 10 ml of
benzene until the benzene extract is not coloured. Combine benzene extract,
wash three times with each 5 ml of water, and allow to stand to separate the
water layer. Transfer the benzene extract into another separating funnel
containing the water layer three times with 2 ml of benzene, and combine the
washings to the benzene extract. To the benzene extract, add an equal volume of
petroleum benzene mix, and continue to extract with each 5 ml of 0.01N sodium
hydroxide until sodium hydroxide solution is not coloured. Combine extracts,
and add 0.01N sodium hydroxide to 100 ml. Measure the absorbance A at 453 nm.
Total carotenoids, % by mass = (A*1000*100)/
3.473 mass of sample 100
iii)
Saffron (Filaments And Powder Form)
Picrocrocine,
Safranal & crocine
Weigh exactly 500 mg of sample and transfer quantitatively the
test portion into the 1000 ml volumetric flask. Add about 900 ml of distilled
water. Stir with a magnetic stirrer (1000 rpm) for 1 h, away from light. Remove
the magnetic bar.Make up to the mark with distilled water. Close with a glass
stopper and homogenize. Filter the solution, rapidly and away from light
through the membrane so as to obtain a clear solution. Adjust the
spectrophotometer and read the absorbance between 220 nm and 480 nm using
distilled water as the reference liquid. The results are obtained by direct
reading of the absorbance at 3 wavelengths, corresponding to the maximum
absorbances of picrocrocine, safranal and crocine as follows:
Picrocrocine: absorbance at 257 nm
Safranal : absorbance at 330 nm
Crocine : absorbance at 440 nm
Identification
of Saffron pigments
Reagents
a) Methanol
b) Ethanol
c) Chloroform
d) Sulphuric acid (95-97% m/m)
e) 4-Methoxybenzaldehyde (Anisaldehyde)
f) Naphthol yellow (Sodium salt of 2,4-dinitronaphthol)
g) Sudan red G
h) Reference solution prepared by dissolving 5 mg of Naphthol
yellow in 5 ml of (expressed as norbixin) 3.473 mass of sample 100 methanol and adding a solution of 5 mg of Sudan
red G in 5 ml of chloroform.
i) Elution solvent consisting of the organic phase of a mixture
containing ethyl acetate : propan-2-ol : water (65:25:10)
j) Revealing solution prepared by mixing in the following order
: 10 ml of anisaldehyde, 90 ml of ethanol and 10 ml sulphuric acid.
Apparatus
a) Chromatography chamber
b) Silica gel plates with indicator of fluorescence GF 254
Procedure
Weighing 0.05 g of sample into a test tube and moisten it with a
drop of water. Wait for 2-3 min, and then add 1 ml of methanol. Allow the
solution to settle for 29 min away from light. Filter it on a small glass wool
plug. Using micropipette load 5 μl of solution on silica gel plate in 2 cm
interval and develop in the chromatography chamber with the elution solvent
until the solvent front has progressed 10 cm. Allow the solvent to evaporate.
Examine the chromatogram in UV light at 254 nm, then in day light. Then spray
onto the plate about 10 ml of the revealing solution. Heat for 5-10 min at a
temperature of 105-110°C while observing the chromatogram.
Interpretation
1. In daylight the lower third of the chromatogram shows three
yellow spots. The spot on the bottom strip is of more intense colour, and
corresponds in colour and in size to the Naphthol yellow spot,it characterizes
crocine.
2. The chromatogram observed in UV light at 254 nm shows 4 main
fluorescent spots, 3 corresponding to the spots observed in daylight and
another with a higher Rf value (»0.55), which characterizes picrocrocine. One
or two rather faint spots of fluorescence are visible at the level of Sudan red
G, characterizing â-hydroxycyclocitral and safranal.
3. After spraying with the revealing solution, the crocine
becomes grayish green in colour, and the picrocrocine becomes violet in colour.
The chromatogram shall not show any other colour spots before spraying,
particularly at the starting point. These would correspond to a deterioration
of the crocine and/ or the presence of foreign colouring matter.
iv.
Caramel
Solid
Content
The solid content of caramel colour is determined by drying a
sample with acid washed sand (40-60 mesh). Mix 30 g of prepared sand accurately
weighed with 1.5-2.0 g caramel colour accurately weighed and dry to constant
weight at 60°C under reduced pressure 50 mm Hg. Record the final weight of the
sand plus caramel. Calculate the percent solids as follows:
Soilds content, % by mass = ((WF −Wi)×100)/ We
Where,
Wf = final weight of sand plus caramel,
Ws= weight of sand, and
Wc= weight of caramel initially added.
Colour
Intensity
Prepare a 0.1 percent m/v solution of the sample in freshly
boiled and cooled distilled water. If the solution is not clear clarify it by
centrifuging, not by filtering.Determine the absorbance of the clear solution
in a 1 cm cell at 610 nm with a suitable spectrophotometer previously
standardized using water as the reference.
Calculate the colour intensity of the caramel colour as follows
:
Colour intensity = (A610 100 )/Percent solids
Ammoniacal
Nitrogen
Reagents
a) Sulphuric acid (0.1N)
b) Magnesium oxide (carbonate free)
c) Methyl red indicator solution (0.5% in ethanol)
d) Sodium hydroxide (0.1N)
Procedure
Add 25 ml of sulphuric acid to a 500 ml receiving flask and
connect it to the distillation apparatus. Transfer about 20 g of the sample
accurately weighed into a 800 ml long neck Kjeldahl digestion flask, and to the
flask add 2 g of magnesium oxide, 200 ml of water and several boiling chips.
Swirl the digestion flask to mix the contents, and quickly connect it to the
distillation apparatus. Heat the digestion flask to boiling and collect about
100 ml of distillate in the receiving flask. Wash the tip of the delivery tube
with a few ml of water, collecting the washings in the receiving flask. Then
add 4 to 5 drops of methyl red indicator and titrate with the sodium hydroxide,
recording the volume (in ml) required as S. Conduct a blank determination and
record volume (in ml) of the sodium hydroxide required as B.
Ammoniacal N2, % by mass = ((S − B)× 0.0014×100)/ Mass of sample in g
v.
4-Methylimidazole
Caramel colour is added to a basic Celite column and eluted with
mixture of chloroform and methanol. The eluent is extracted with dilute
sulphuric acid and the aqueous extract concentrated, brought to a known volume
and neutralized to a slightly alkaline pH. The alkaline extract obtained is
analyzed by paper chromatography. The developed spots are visualized by
spraying with diazosulfanilic acid reagent, and sodium carbonate solution
separately.
Reagents
a) Celite 545
b) Sodium hydroxide solution (2N)
c) Elution solvent (Chloroform:Ethanol=80:20, v/v)
d) Sulphuric acid solution (0.05N)
e) Developing solvent-1 containing diethyl ether, chloroform,
methanol and ammonium hydroxide= 80:20:20:4(v/v)
f) Developing solvent-2 containing 3 parts of n-propyl alcohol
and 1 part of 0.2N ammonia solution.
g) Spraying reagent-1 : (a) Prepare freshly a 5.0% m/m solution
of sodium nitrite, cool to 0°C.
(b) Add 0.9 g of sulphanilic acid to 9.0 ml of conc. HCl taken
in a 100 ml flask and dilute to 100 ml with distilled water. Cool to 0°C.
h) Spraying reagent-2 : 5 % m/v sodium carbonate solution.
i) Stock solution of 4MeI : Dissolve 100 mg of 4-methylimidazole
in 100 ml of 0.1N sulphuric acid. Store the solution in a refrigerator.
j) Standard solution of 4-MeI: Pipette out 1 ml of 4-MeI stock
solution in a 10 ml flask and dilute to volume with distilled water. Bring the
pH of the solution to 9 using solid sodium carbonate.
The solution corresponds to 100 mg/kg.
Procedure
Extraction:
Prepare a basic column
packing by mixing well Celite 545 and 2N NaOH in the proportion of 2 ml of 2N
NaOH to 3 g Celite 545. Place a fine glass wool plug at the base of the
chromatographic column, followed by 5.0 g of basic column packing. Tap the
packing firmly to a uniform mass.
Take 10 g of sample of caramel in 150 ml beaker. To this add 6 g
of 20 % Na2CO3 solution. Mix well and add 12.0 g Celite 545.
After thoroughly mixing add the mixture to the prepared column. Dry, wash the
beaker with about 2.0 g Celite 545 and add this wash to column. Place a plug a
glass wool at the top of the dry wash and tap the contents of the column.
Elute the column with elution mixture until 125 ml has been
collected. The elution rate should be 5 ml/min and collected into 250 ml
separating funnel. Extract the elute with 20 ml portion of 0.05N sulphuric acid
and then with second 10 ml portion of 0.05N sulphuric acid. Transfer the
combined aqueous layers to 100 ml vacuum flask and concentrate to 5 ml by
drying under vacuum at a temperature not exceeding 55°C (the volume should not
be reduced below 4 ml)
Transfer this aqueous solution into a 10 ml volumetric flask,
which also receives rinsing with 1 ml portion of distilled water until the mark
is reached. After mixing transfer the aqueous concentrate to a suitable sample
vial and treat with small portion of sodium carbonate anhydrous powder until CO2 evolution
ceases and pH meter indicates pH 9.
Paper
chromatography: Spot 10 ml of this solution
on the chromatographic paper 3 cm from the bottom of the paper, and develop the
chromatogram at 25-28°C by ascending paper chromatography using either of the
developing solvent.Allow the solvent to travel up to 15 cm.
Remove
the paper from the tank and dry it by air drier. Spray the paper with diazosulfanilic acid reagent
until the paper is just wet and then develop the colour by a light spray of 5%
m/v sodium carbonate solution. Cut the maroon colour spots and elute in 20 %
ethanol (5-10 ml). Keep aside for 30 min and immediately note the absorbance of
solution at 505 nm. Side by side prepare the calibrated graph using various
concentrations of 4-MeI and the amount of 4-MeI in the unknown is the red off
directly from the above calibrated graph.
Equivalent colour basis= (Concentration on solids basis×0.1)/ Colour int ensity
This gives content expressed in terms of a product having a
colour intensity of 0.1 absorbance units.
2-Acetyl-4-Tetrahydroxy
Butylimidazole (Thi)
THI is converted into its 2,4-dinitrophenyl hydrazone. This
derivative is separated from excess reagent and carbonylic contaminants by HPLC
on RP-8, then determined its absorbance at 385 nm.
Reagents
Cation-exchange resin (strong): Dowex 50 AG×8, H+, 100-200 mesh
Cation-exchange resin (weak): Amberlite CG AG, H+, 100-200 mesh
Methanol (carbonyl free)
Dimethoxyethane
Procedure
Caramel colour (200-250 mg) is weighed accurately then dissolved
in water (3 ml). The solution is passed through a combined column (upper column
: weakly acidic cation exchanger, 50-60 mm bed height/ 12.5 mm i.d. or 80-90 mm
bed height / 10 mm i.d. and lower column : strongly acidic cation exchanger, 60
mm bed height) with 100 ml of water. The upper column is disconnected. The
lower column is eluted with 0.5M HCl. The first 10 ml of elute are discarded
then a volume of 35 ml is collected. The solution is concentrated to dryness at
40°C and 15 torr. The syrup residue is dissolved in methanol (250 ml) and
2,4-dinitrophenyl hydrazine reagent (250 ml) is added. The reaction mixture is
transferred to a septum-capped vial and stored for 5 h at room temperature. A
volume of 1-25 μl is injected on to a Lichrosorb RP-8 (10 mm) HPLC column.
The mobile phase is methanol/0.1M H3PO4 :
50:50 (v/v). At a mobile phase flow rate of 2 ml/min and column dimensions of
250 mm × 4.6 mm, THI-DNPH is eluted at about 6.3±0.1 min. It is detected at 385
nm and the peak height is measured. The amount is calculated from a calibration
curve prepared with THIDNPH in methanol.
Total
Sulphur
Take a 100 ml crucible, place 1-3 g MgO, 1 g sucrose powder and
50 ml HNO3. Add 5-10 g caramel colour. Place same quantity
of reagents in another crucible as blank. Evaporate on steam bath to paste.
Place in cold muffle furnace and gradually heat (525°C) until all NO2 fumes
are driven off. Cool, dissolve and neutralize with dilute HCL, adding excess of
5 ml. Filter, heat to boiling and add 5 ml of 10 % BaCl2.2H2O
solution dropwise. Evaporate to 100 ml, let stand overnight, filter, wash,
ignite and weigh the BaSO4. Correct result for BaSO4 obtained
in blank and report as mg S/100 g.
Sulphur
Dioxide
Reagents
a) Hydrogen peroxide (3% free from sulphate)
b) Barium chloride (10% m/v)
c) Hydrochloric acid (2N)
d) Conc. Hydrochloric acid
e) Carbon dioxide gas
f) Sodium hydroxide (0.1N)
g) Bromophenol blue indicator (Dissolve 0.5 g of bromophenol
blue in 7.5 ml of 0.1N sodium hydroxide and dilute to 1 litre.
Procedure
Measure 25 ml of hydrogen peroxide into the conical flask and
add 25 ml of distilled water. Measure 10 ml of hydrogen peroxide and add into
the first Wohler tube (U tube). In the second tube (as a guard) place 5 ml of a
mixture of equal volumes of hydrogen peroxide and barium chloride solutions
which has been slightly acidified with 2N HCl solution.
Introduce 500 ml of distilled water and 20 ml of conc. HCl into
the round bottom flask. Connect the CO2 tube to the flask and boil
the water for a short time in a current of CO2 gas. Introduce
about 20 g of sample accurately weighed into the round bottom flask, through
the funnel, continuing the flow of CO2 gas. While adding the sample,
see that there shall not be any back pressure. Boil it for 2h passing a slow
current of CO2 gas throughout the test. Before the end of the distillation
stop the flow of water through the condenser to allow any sulphur dioxide which
is retained by the condensed moisture in the tube of the condenser to be driven
over into the receiver.As soon as the delivery tube, condenser is hot, disconnect
the straight tube first, wash it with water. Combine the contents of first
Wohler tube in the receiver or conical flask. Cool the conical flask and
titrate with the NaOH solution using bromophenol blue indicator. Calculate the
percentage of sulphur dioxide. 1 ml of 0.1N NaOH is equivalent to 3.203 mg of
sulphur dioxide (Figure ).
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