Issue 4, 2003

Soxhlet extraction of acrylamide from potato chips

Abstract

The problem of complete extraction of acrylamide from potato chips was investigated. A method was developed based on the Soxhlet extraction technique. A defatted sample was extracted continuously with methanol, for 10 days, in a Soxhlet extractor. After about 7 days, a constant concentration of acrylamide was reached. This indicates that all the acrylamide that could be removed from the sample had been extracted. Acrylamide was identified in the extract using GC-MS and scan mode. Total concentration was 14500 µg kg−1 using GC-FID and standard additions. Complementary determinations, using an external standard (GC-FID and GC-MS) and an internal standard (GC-FID), showed results within ±5%. A previously published study, using a static extraction method and GC-MS and LC-MS-MS, showed concentrations of 2287 and 1993 µg kg−1, respectively. The results are discussed in relation to a recent model and analogous experiments. The extracted amount of acrylamide is affected by several parameters: solvent properties, solvent volume, extraction time, temperature, particle size, and the microstructure of the sample.

Article information

Article type
Communication
Submitted
20 Dec 2002
Accepted
14 Mar 2003
First published
26 Mar 2003

Analyst, 2003,128, 332-334

Soxhlet extraction of acrylamide from potato chips

J. R. Pedersen and J. O. Olsson, Analyst, 2003, 128, 332 DOI: 10.1039/B212623K

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