Quantification of palm oil bioactive compounds by ultra‐high‐performance supercritical fluid chromatography and chemometrics

Canadian Journal of Chemical Engineering(2020)

Cited 1|Views1
No score
Abstract
Lycopene, beta-carotene, coenzyme Q10, and lutein are minor constituents of palm oil that are removed during biodiesel production to produce light-coloured oils. With the aim to investigate the recovery of these valuable compounds, a separation method was developed to quantify carotenoids and coenzyme Q10 in palm oil by ultra-high-performance supercritical fluid chromatography. Due to the presence of interferents, different clean-up procedures were evaluated; however, these approaches were ineffective and the separation method was developed without this step. The chemometric method multivariate curve resolution-alternating least squares was employed to properly quantify lycopene, beta-carotene, and coenzyme Q10 in the presence of interferents. Lutein was sufficiently resolved to be quantified by a univariate method. Lycopene concentration was below the limit of quantification 3.12 mu g/mL (3.12 x 10(-3) kg/m(3)). Beta-carotene concentration was determined as being 183.48 +/- 1.66 mu g/mL (183.48 +/- 1.66 x 10(-3) kg/m(3)). Coenzyme Q10 concentration was lower than the limit of detection 4.22 mu g/mL (4.22 x 10(-3) kg/m(3)) and lutein concentration 9.24 mu g/mL (9.24 x 10(-3) kg/m(3)) was below the limit of quantification. The study showed the analytical challenges associated with the separation and quantification of minor constituents of a highly complex matrix such as palm oil and demonstrated that the recovery of beta-carotene could be economically viable due to its wide range of application in industry.
More
Translated text
Key words
carotenoids, coenzyme Q10, MCR&#8208, ALS, palm oil, UHPSFC
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined