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Analysis of food additives by GPC/SEC - Application compendium

Guides | 2015 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Consumables, LC columns, GPC/SEC
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Polymeric additives such as pectins, cellulose derivatives, starches and gums are essential in food formulation to control texture, stability, shelf life and processing efficiency. Gel permeation chromatography (GPC/SEC) provides critical molecular weight and structural information enabling quality control and product development in the food industry.

Study Aims and Overview


This compendium from Agilent Technologies, authored by Graham Cleaver, demonstrates applications of GPC/SEC using various detectors and columns to characterize common food additives. Each section outlines analysis goals, sample preparation and the impact of polymer structure on functional properties.

Methodology and Instrumentation


A combination of high-resolution SEC columns and multi-detection strategies was employed:
  • Refractive index detection for concentration profiling
  • Viscometry for intrinsic viscosity and universal calibration
  • Dual-angle light scattering for absolute molecular weight
  • Agilent systems: PL-GPC 50, 1260 Infinity Multi-Detector Suite, PL aquagel-OH, PLgel and Olexis columns
Sample preparation involved dissolution in aqueous and organic eluents, filtration and thermostatted separation.

Major Results and Discussion


  • Pectins: Triple detection revealed multimodal molecular weight distributions and heterogeneous chain architectures with distinct ‘smooth’ and ‘hairy’ regions reflected in Mark–Houwink and conformation plots.
  • Carboxymethyl cellulose: Universal calibration yielded accurate molecular weight distributions independent of standards; Mark–Houwink curvature indicated chemical and structural heterogeneity along the polymer chains.
  • Starches: Analysis of two starch sources on PLgel Olexis columns showed mono- and bimodal weight profiles; Mark–Houwink overlays highlighted differences in branching and solution size affecting thickening performance.
  • Corn flour: Distinct distributions between two samples correlated with amylose-to-amylopectin ratios; universal calibration and viscosity data confirmed structural origins of differing rheological behaviors.
  • Pullulan and dextran: Linear pullulan vs. highly branched dextran exhibited contrasting molecular weight distributions and intrinsic viscosities; branching density variations were clearly captured by multi-detector SEC.
  • Gelatin: Dual-angle light scattering quantified weight-average molecular weights and slice-by-slice distribution in a buffered system, critical for predicting gelling properties.
  • Gums: Comparative SEC of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ batches of gum Arabic demonstrated batch-to-batch variability in high-molecular-weight fractions, underlining the need for rigorous QC.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Multi-detection GPC/SEC allows food manufacturers to:
  • Ensure batch consistency and label compliance
  • Tailor additive properties for texture and stability
  • Detect structural variations affecting processing and shelf life
  • Streamline QA/QC workflows with high-resolution molecular analysis

Future Trends and Potential Uses


Emerging directions include:
  • Hyphenated techniques coupling SEC with mass spectrometry for compositional insights
  • Advanced detectors (higher angles, multiwavelength) for improved sensitivity
  • Automated data analysis leveraging machine learning for pattern recognition in complex polymers
  • Miniaturized and higher-throughput SEC platforms to accelerate food additive screening

Conclusion


GPC/SEC with multi-detection provides a comprehensive toolkit for characterizing polymeric food additives. By combining universal calibration, viscometry and light scattering on high-performance columns, analysts can obtain accurate molecular weight, size and structural information vital for product development and quality assurance.

Reference


  • Cleaver G. Analysis of food additives by GPC/SEC Application compendium. Agilent Technologies; 2015.

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