Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent

Electrochemistry of food molecules have previously been studied in order to fundamentally understand their redox behaviour, and to see if this relates to their in vivo properties and to the metabolites that are formed. By employing electroanalytical techniques, the quantification of molecules in...

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主要作者: Chan, Kwok Kiong
其他作者: Richard David Webster
格式: Theses and Dissertations
語言:English
出版: 2017
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在線閱讀:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69567
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-695672023-02-28T23:50:38Z Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent Chan, Kwok Kiong Richard David Webster School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences DRNTU::Science::Chemistry Electrochemistry of food molecules have previously been studied in order to fundamentally understand their redox behaviour, and to see if this relates to their in vivo properties and to the metabolites that are formed. By employing electroanalytical techniques, the quantification of molecules in food samples could be achieved. Numerous electrochemical studies have been conducted in aqueous solution, focusing on the development of electrodes for quantitative purposes. However, very few studies were performed in organic solvents, which have similar environment to which non water soluble food molecules undergo metabolic reactions. Therefore, in this thesis, the electrochemistry of caffeine and capsaicinoids were explored in acetonitrile. The use of acetonitrile can reduce the chemical reaction between water in the solvent and the intermediate, allowing their redox behaviour, the intermediates and products all to be studied. In addition, detection methods for caffeine and capsaicinoids in acetonitrile were developed based on their electrochemical behaviour. Detection in acetonitrile allows for solid-phase extraction which aids in the removal of water-soluble interferences in samples. Moreover, the detection process is simple and easy with no electrode modification and could be performed in small volume, reducing reagents used. ​Doctor of Philosophy (SPMS) 2017-02-16T08:44:37Z 2017-02-16T08:44:37Z 2017 Thesis Chan, K. K. (2017). Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69567 10.32657/10356/69567 en 165 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Chemistry
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Chemistry
Chan, Kwok Kiong
Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
description Electrochemistry of food molecules have previously been studied in order to fundamentally understand their redox behaviour, and to see if this relates to their in vivo properties and to the metabolites that are formed. By employing electroanalytical techniques, the quantification of molecules in food samples could be achieved. Numerous electrochemical studies have been conducted in aqueous solution, focusing on the development of electrodes for quantitative purposes. However, very few studies were performed in organic solvents, which have similar environment to which non water soluble food molecules undergo metabolic reactions. Therefore, in this thesis, the electrochemistry of caffeine and capsaicinoids were explored in acetonitrile. The use of acetonitrile can reduce the chemical reaction between water in the solvent and the intermediate, allowing their redox behaviour, the intermediates and products all to be studied. In addition, detection methods for caffeine and capsaicinoids in acetonitrile were developed based on their electrochemical behaviour. Detection in acetonitrile allows for solid-phase extraction which aids in the removal of water-soluble interferences in samples. Moreover, the detection process is simple and easy with no electrode modification and could be performed in small volume, reducing reagents used.
author2 Richard David Webster
author_facet Richard David Webster
Chan, Kwok Kiong
format Theses and Dissertations
author Chan, Kwok Kiong
author_sort Chan, Kwok Kiong
title Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
title_short Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
title_full Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
title_fullStr Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
title_full_unstemmed Electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
title_sort electrochemical mechanistic studies and electrochemical detection of caffeine and capsaicinoids extracted into an organic solvent
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69567
_version_ 1759856447402803200