Fast Separations of Organic Acids in an Orange Juice Sample Using High-Pressure Capillary IC
Applications | 2016 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
Profiling organic acids and inorganic anions in fruit juices is critical for flavor characterization, spoilage monitoring, adulteration detection and regulatory compliance. Fast, reliable analysis supports quality control, cost-effective production and consumer safety in the beverage industry.
This study evaluates how increased flow rates on a high-pressure capillary ion chromatography system can reduce analysis time while maintaining resolution. A commercially packaged orange juice sample was tested using the Thermo Scientific Dionex ICS-5000+ HPIC system and an IonSwift MAX-100 capillary column.
The system configuration included:
Twelve target analytes (including formate, lactate, malate, citrate and common inorganic anions) were baseline resolved at both flow rates. Doubling the flow rate to 0.024 mL/min halved the run time from 30 min to 15 min while pressures remained within the 5000 psi tolerance of the HPIC system. Calibration yielded linear responses (r2 > 0.99) across relevant concentration ranges.
Ongoing developments may include integration with automated sample preparation, coupling capillary IC to mass spectrometry for enhanced detection, further miniaturization of flow paths and real-time monitoring of juice production lines. Novel stationary phases and advanced electrolytic generation may further improve speed and selectivity.
High-pressure capillary ion chromatography with elevated flow rates provides fast, efficient separation of organic acids and inorganic anions in orange juice without compromising resolution. This approach offers significant gains in throughput, cost savings and analytical performance for the beverage industry.
Ion chromatography
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerThermo Fisher Scientific
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Profiling organic acids and inorganic anions in fruit juices is critical for flavor characterization, spoilage monitoring, adulteration detection and regulatory compliance. Fast, reliable analysis supports quality control, cost-effective production and consumer safety in the beverage industry.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluates how increased flow rates on a high-pressure capillary ion chromatography system can reduce analysis time while maintaining resolution. A commercially packaged orange juice sample was tested using the Thermo Scientific Dionex ICS-5000+ HPIC system and an IonSwift MAX-100 capillary column.
Methodology and Instrumentation
The system configuration included:
- Dionex ICS-5000+ HPIC reagent-free capillary IC with SP single or DP dual high-pressure pumps
- Dionex EGC-KOH capillary eluent generator cartridge and CR-ATC anion trap
- EG degas cartridge, CRD 200 carbonate removal device and ACES suppressor
- IonSwift MAX-100 guard (0.25 × 250 mm) and separation columns
- Chromeleon chromatography data system v6.8/7.1; suppressed conductivity detection (8–18 mA)
- Eluent gradient: 0.1 mM to 65 mM KOH over 45 min; temperatures: column 30 °C, compartment 15 °C
- Flow rates compared: 0.012 mL/min (≈2500 psi) vs 0.024 mL/min (≈4200 psi)
- Sample prep: 1:40 dilution of orange juice, 0.2 µm filtration, 0.4 µL injection
Main Results and Discussion
Twelve target analytes (including formate, lactate, malate, citrate and common inorganic anions) were baseline resolved at both flow rates. Doubling the flow rate to 0.024 mL/min halved the run time from 30 min to 15 min while pressures remained within the 5000 psi tolerance of the HPIC system. Calibration yielded linear responses (r2 > 0.99) across relevant concentration ranges.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- 50% reduction in analysis time increases sample throughput
- Low sample volume (0.4 µL) conserves reagents and reduces waste
- Continuous operation with minimal water consumption (30–40 mL/day)
- High resolution with sensitive suppressed conductivity detection
- Robust performance at elevated pressures for routine QA/QC in beverage laboratories
Future Trends and Applications
Ongoing developments may include integration with automated sample preparation, coupling capillary IC to mass spectrometry for enhanced detection, further miniaturization of flow paths and real-time monitoring of juice production lines. Novel stationary phases and advanced electrolytic generation may further improve speed and selectivity.
Conclusion
High-pressure capillary ion chromatography with elevated flow rates provides fast, efficient separation of organic acids and inorganic anions in orange juice without compromising resolution. This approach offers significant gains in throughput, cost savings and analytical performance for the beverage industry.
References
- Food Labeling. Code of Federal Regulations, Part 101, Title 21, 2010.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Dionex Application Brief 137, Determination of Inorganic Anions and Organic Acids in Apple and Orange Juice Samples Using Capillary IC, 2011.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Dionex Technical Note 113, Practical Guidance to Capillary IC, 2012.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Dionex Technical Note 131, Configuring High-Pressure Capillary IC on the Modular IC System, 2012.
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