Issue 3, 1984

Comparative assessment of high-performance liquid chromatographic methods for the determination of ascorbic acid and thiamin in foods

Abstract

A comparative assessment of HPLC methods for vitamin analysis was designed in which a number of institutions were asked to carry out the determination of ascorbic acid and thiamin in three samples (1, a mixture of thiamin and ascorbic acid in glucose; and 2 and 3, fortified breakfast cereals). Coefficients of variation between laboratories for sample 1 (ascorbic acid 5.6 and thiamin 6.9%) were much lower than for samples 2 and 3 (ascorbic acid 23 and 19% and thiamin 47 and 34%, respectively), the latter being considerably greater than is desirable. It is concluded that HPLC will not become a widely accepted technique for the determination of vitamins in foods until all the stages of the analysis, including extraction, clean-up and HPLC, are thoroughly validated.

Article information

Article type
Paper

Analyst, 1984,109, 267-271

Comparative assessment of high-performance liquid chromatographic methods for the determination of ascorbic acid and thiamin in foods

I. A. Nicolson, R. Macrae and D. P. Richardson, Analyst, 1984, 109, 267 DOI: 10.1039/AN9840900267

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