Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester

Labelling of trans fatty acid (TFA) content in foods is mandatory in many countries and being considered in several countries because of the deleterious effect of trans fat in health and nutrition of the individual. The impact of legislation restricting use of TFA in food products and requiring TFA...

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Main Author: Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon
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Language:English
Published: Animo Repository 2014
Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/4648
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:etd_masteral-114862021-01-28T07:42:47Z Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon Labelling of trans fatty acid (TFA) content in foods is mandatory in many countries and being considered in several countries because of the deleterious effect of trans fat in health and nutrition of the individual. The impact of legislation restricting use of TFA in food products and requiring TFA content on food labels prompt analytical laboratories to address outstanding issues on trans fatty acid analysis. In this work, a molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) using trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester (trans oleic FAME) as template has been prepared by precipitation polymerization method using methacrylic acid as functional monomer, trimethylolpropane methacrylate (TRIM) as cross-linking agent, 2,2-azobis (isobutyronitrile) as the radical initiator and dichloromethane as porogen. This trans-MIP was used as sorbent for the solid-phase extraction of trans oleic FAME before injection to the gas chromatograph for quantification. A non-imprinted polymer (NIP) was also prepared using the same procedure but without the addition of the template, trans oleic FAME. Template removal was done by Soxhlet extraction using methanol-acetic acid (9:1 v/v) as the extraction solvent. The binding properties of trans oleic FAME imprinted polymers were evaluated in different solvent system by equilibrium experiments. A higher difference in the binding affinity between the trans oleic FAME to MIP and NIP in heptane and dichloromethane was observed. Scatchard plots analysis revealed that there were two classes of binding sites populated in the imprinted polymers which indicated that the polymer possesses a heterogeneous binding sites distribution. The stronger affinity binding type exhibits dissociation constant (Kd) 10 times smaller than that of the weaker type with binding capacity of 48.04 ug trans oleic FAME/mg MIP. The resulting Freundlich isotherm further demonstrated the heterogeneity of the binding sites of the MIP, with heterogeneity index equal 0.4758 which is less than 1. The imprinting effect of the MIP was assessed by its performance as sorbent in SPE experiment by varying the solvent type, time, amount of sorbent and amount of trans oleic FAME to obtain acceptable recoveries in each step of the solid-phase extraction. Recoveries in trans-MIP was higher ( 79.9-87.4%) using methanol-acetic acid (90:10 v/v) as the eluting solvent compared to NIP (55.8-68.7%). Polymer characterization was done by scanning electron microscopy and particle size analyzer for its morphology and particle size distribution, respectively. Elemental and FTIR analysis of the synthesized MIP was also done and results showed that the polymerization method was successful. 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/4648 Master's Theses English Animo Repository
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
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content_provider De La Salle University Library
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description Labelling of trans fatty acid (TFA) content in foods is mandatory in many countries and being considered in several countries because of the deleterious effect of trans fat in health and nutrition of the individual. The impact of legislation restricting use of TFA in food products and requiring TFA content on food labels prompt analytical laboratories to address outstanding issues on trans fatty acid analysis. In this work, a molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) using trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester (trans oleic FAME) as template has been prepared by precipitation polymerization method using methacrylic acid as functional monomer, trimethylolpropane methacrylate (TRIM) as cross-linking agent, 2,2-azobis (isobutyronitrile) as the radical initiator and dichloromethane as porogen. This trans-MIP was used as sorbent for the solid-phase extraction of trans oleic FAME before injection to the gas chromatograph for quantification. A non-imprinted polymer (NIP) was also prepared using the same procedure but without the addition of the template, trans oleic FAME. Template removal was done by Soxhlet extraction using methanol-acetic acid (9:1 v/v) as the extraction solvent. The binding properties of trans oleic FAME imprinted polymers were evaluated in different solvent system by equilibrium experiments. A higher difference in the binding affinity between the trans oleic FAME to MIP and NIP in heptane and dichloromethane was observed. Scatchard plots analysis revealed that there were two classes of binding sites populated in the imprinted polymers which indicated that the polymer possesses a heterogeneous binding sites distribution. The stronger affinity binding type exhibits dissociation constant (Kd) 10 times smaller than that of the weaker type with binding capacity of 48.04 ug trans oleic FAME/mg MIP. The resulting Freundlich isotherm further demonstrated the heterogeneity of the binding sites of the MIP, with heterogeneity index equal 0.4758 which is less than 1. The imprinting effect of the MIP was assessed by its performance as sorbent in SPE experiment by varying the solvent type, time, amount of sorbent and amount of trans oleic FAME to obtain acceptable recoveries in each step of the solid-phase extraction. Recoveries in trans-MIP was higher ( 79.9-87.4%) using methanol-acetic acid (90:10 v/v) as the eluting solvent compared to NIP (55.8-68.7%). Polymer characterization was done by scanning electron microscopy and particle size analyzer for its morphology and particle size distribution, respectively. Elemental and FTIR analysis of the synthesized MIP was also done and results showed that the polymerization method was successful.
format text
author Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon
spellingShingle Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon
Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
author_facet Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon
author_sort Fuertes, Rosario Tajaon
title Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
title_short Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
title_full Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
title_fullStr Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
title_full_unstemmed Synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
title_sort synthesis and evaluation of molecularly imprinted polymer as sorbent for solid-phase extraction of trans oleic fatty acid methyl ester
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2014
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/etd_masteral/4648
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