Molecules (Aug 2021)

Innovative Combination of Dispersive Solid Phase Extraction Followed by NIR-Detection and Multivariate Data Analysis for Prediction of Total Polyphenolic Content

  • Christoph Kappacher,
  • Markus Neurauter,
  • Matthias Rainer,
  • Günther K. Bonn,
  • Christian W. Huck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26164807
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 16
p. 4807

Abstract

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Recently polyphenols attracted great interest in the field of food and nutrition as well as in the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industries due to their health benefits through antioxidative behavior in the human body. However, because of the high number of compounds characterized as phenols and their structural diversity, quantification of polyphenols turns out to be a highly complex task. Although, a wide variety of analytical methods are used for the determination of total polyphenolic content, they are all found to be lacking in a variety of different tasks, such as their limits of detection and quantification, repeatability, accuracy and specificity. For this reason, a novel approach combining the advantages of solid phase purification, near infrared analysis and multivariate data analysis was investigated for the prediction of total polyphenolic content, suitable for a wide range of sample matrices. Dispersive solid phase extraction was performed and optimized using polyvinylpyrrolidone as sorbent, known to selectively bind polyphenols. Near-infrared detection of adsorbed polyphenols was carried out subsequently. Furthermore, the method was in-house validated, examining selectivity, repeatability and accuracy, working range, as well as multivariate limit of detection and limit of quantification, comparing it with two routinely used methods—namely, Folin–Ciocalteu photometric assay and Löwenthal titration. The novel established method was applied for the prediction of total polyphenolic content in tea and wine samples.

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