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Chapter 4 Gravimetric Analysis

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Chapt 4- NTLP

GRAVIMETRIC ANALYSIS

Application to Food Analysis

CONTENTS
 History of Gravimetric Analysis
 Gravimetric techniques
 Direct gravimetric analysis
 Indirect gravimetric analysis
 Precipitate gravimetric analysis
 Others
 Gravimetric analysis procedure
 Data calculations
 Application to food analysis

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Chapt 4- NTLP

History of Gravimetric Analysis


 Jons Jacob Berzelius (1779-1848)
 Use of ashless filter paper in gravimetry
 Use of hydrofluoric acid (HF) to decompose silicates
 Use of the metric system in weight determinations
 Theodore W. Richards (1868-1928)
 Developed and refined many techniques of
gravimetric analysis of silver and chlorine to
determine the atomic weights.
 Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1914

Gravimetric analysis
 Gravimetric methods based on determining the mass of
a pure compound to which the analyte is chemically
related.
 an absolute measurement (accurate and precise methods)
Example:

 Determination of lead (Pb+2) in water

Pb+ + 2Cl-  PbCl2(s)

 By adding excess Cl- to the sample, essentially all of the Pb+2 will
precipitate as PbCl2.

 Mass of PbCl2 is then determined.


- used to calculate the amount of Pb+2 in original solution

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Classification of Gravimetric methods


 Volatilization gravimetry
 Ash analysis
 Water analysis
 Precipitation methods
 Inorganics
 Organics
 Miscellaneous methods
 Electro-gravimetry

Direct gravimetric analysis


 Ashing analysis – Chapter 16 (287- 297)
 Ash refers to the inorganic (mineral) residue
remaining after the combustion or complete
acid-facilitated oxidation of organic matter in
food.
 first step in mineral analysis
 02 major types: dry ashing and wet ashing.
 The final (ashed) weight is compared to the
original weight of the sample.

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Ashing analysis
 Dry ashing
 Wet ashing
 Ash content (total mineral):
0 - 12 %
(< 5 % for fresh foods)

The average ash content


for various food groups

Ashing analysis
 METHODS
 Principles,
 materials,
 instrumentation,
 general procedures,
 and applications

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Ashing analysis
 Sample Preparation
- Sample sizes: 2–10 g even 250 mg (newer
instruments)
- a homogenous, representative sample
- use of sample blanks
 Source of contaminants:
 Eliminate of contaminants

Ashing analysis –
Sample preparation
 Plant Materials
 - oven-dried (remove moisture) in two stages:
first at a lower temperature of 55 °C, then at a
higher temperature ≤ 100 °C. Plant material with
moisture ≤ 15 % ashed without prior drying.
 - the goal of the analysis is ash or specific
mineral analysis alone, low-temperature drying
and then ashed in the same crucible.
 Fat and Sugar Products
 Animal products, syrups, and spices (high fat,
moisture, or high sugar content)

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Ashing analysis
 Dry Ashing
 Principles and Instrumentation
 ≥ 525 °C
 Crucible selection
 Quartz crucibles
 Vycor® brand crucibles
 Pyrex® Gooch crucibles
 Porcelain crucibles
 Steel crucibles
 Platinum crucibles
 Quartz fiber crucibles

Ashing analysis
 Dry Ashing
 Calculations
 The ash content:

 WAA = weight after ashing


 TWOC = tare weight of crucible
 OSW = original sample weight
 DMC = % solids/100

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Ashing analysis
 Wet Ashing
 Principle, Materials, and Applications
 Wet ashing/ wet oxidation/ wet digestion.
 acid solutions:
 (1) nitric acid,
 (2) sulfuric acid-hydrogen peroxide
 (3) perchloric acid
 AOAC procedure (e.g., AOAC Method 975.03)
 A combination of dry and wet ash procedure:
AOAC Method 985.35

Ashing analysis
 Microwave Ashing
 wet ashing and dry ashing
 Closed-vessel microwave digestion systems
 Open-vessel digestion systems

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Ashing analysis
 Microwave Dry Ashing
 microwave muffle furnaces

Ashing analysis
 Other Ash Measurements
 1. Soluble and insoluble ash (e.g., AOAC
Method 900.02).
 2. Ash insoluble in acid.
 3. Alkalinity of ash (e.g., AOAC Method
900.02, 940.26).
 4. Sulfated ash (AOAC Method 900.02,
950.77).

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Volatilization gravimetry
Moisture analysis
 Water content (Moisture content)
 Water activity
 Importance of Moisture Assays
 Preservation and stability
 Quality factors
 Convenience in packaging or shipping
 Meeting compositional standards and standards of identity
 Accurate computation of nutritional value
 Expressing results of other analytical determinations on a
uniform basis

Water in Foods

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Moisture analysis
 Oven Drying Methods
 Forced Draft Oven
 Vacuum Oven
 Microwave Analyzer
 Infrared Drying
 Rapid Moisture Analyzer Technology
 Thermogravimetric Analyzer
 Distillation

Moisture analysis
 Oven Drying Methods
 direct methods
 the sample is heated under specified conditions,
and the loss of weight is used to calculate the
moisture content of the sample.
 The amount of moisture determined is highly
dependent on the type of oven used, conditions
within the oven, and the time and temperature of
drying.
 Time required: ~1 h - >24 h.

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Moisture analysis
 Removal of Moisture
 Decomposition of Other Food Constituents
 Temperature Control
 Types of Pans for Oven Drying Methods
 Handling and Preparation of Pans
 Calculations
 wwb
 dwb

Precipitation analysis
 The quantitative determination of a substance by
precipitation followed by isolation and weighing of the
precipitate.
X (analyte) + C (reagent)  CX (sparingly soluble)
 Example:
 Determination of Calcium in natural water
AOAC (Association of Official Analytical Chemists)

2NH 3  H 2 C 2 O 4  2NH 4  C 2 O 24-


Ca 2 (aq )  C 2 O 24- (aq )  CaC 2 O 4 ( s )
To
CaC 2 O 4 ( s )  CaO(s)  CO (s)  CO 2 

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Common Steps in Gravimetric analysis


1. Sampling
2. Preparation of the solution
3. Precipitation
4. Digestion
5. Filtration
6. Washing
7. Drying or igniting
8. Weighing
9. Calculation

Weigh precipitate

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Precipitating agents
 Produce a precipitate of low solubility product,
Ksp
 Specifically: react only with a single species
 Eg. Dimethylglyoxime  Ni2+
 Selectively: react with a limited number of
species
 Eg. AgNO3  Cl-, Br-, I-, SCN-

Relative supersaturation (RS) ratio


QS
RS 
S
 Q – concentration of the solute at any instant
 S – equilibrium solubility
 Particle size is in inverse ratio to RS (# 1/RS)

RS  particle size  (colloidal)


RS  particle size  (crystalline solid)

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Solubility Product (S)

BmAn (solid) BmAn (soln.) m Bx+ + n Ay-


Sparingly soluble almost complete dissociation since the resulting
electrolyte substance soln. is very dilute
(having ionic lattice)

Solubility = s moles/L B  = ms moles/L A  = ns moles/L


x y

B  A 
x m y n But, [BmAn] is constant because the soln is
in contact with large excess of solid BmAn
Ke =
Bm An  Ke X [BmAn] = S (Solubility product )

S=B   A 
x m y n
= (ms)m (ns)n

DATA CALCULATIONS
 Sample in solid form

 Sample in liquid form

 Gravimetric factor (F)

= ×

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Data calculation
 Solid sample
1. Weighing a (g) of solid sample, obtaining m (g) of
weighed precipitate (compound or mixture):
m
%X  .100
a

Data calculation
 Solid sample
 Convert from mass of dried pure precipitate to mass
of analyte (X)

MX 100
%X  m    mole ratio 
M ppt a

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Chapt 4- NTLP

Data calculation
 Solid sample
1. Weighing a (g) of solid sample, diluted into V (mL), get
VX (mL) obtaining m (g) of weighed precipitate
(compound or mixture):

V 100
%X  m   
VX a

Data calculation
 Liquid sample
1. VX mL of liquid sample  gravimetric analysis  m (g)
dried precipitate
MX 1000
Cg / L ( X )  m    mole ratio 
M ppt VX

2. V mL of sample diluted into V1 (mL), get VX (mL)


obtaining m (g) of weighed precipitate:

V1 1000
C g / L ( X )  m  .F . .
VX V

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