Determination of vitamin K1 in powdered infant formulas, using supercritical fluid extraction and liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection.

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Abstract

Vitamin K1 (phylloquinone) is extracted from commercial soy protein-based and milk-based powdered infant formulas by using supercritical fluid extraction with CO2 at 8000 psi and 60 degrees C. Quantitative extraction requires only 15 min, and does not suffer from the problems associated with conventional solvent extraction of lipophilic materials from media such as formulas. Vitamin K1 is determined in the extracts by using reverse-phase liquid chromatography (LC) with reductive mode electrochemical detection at a silver electrode polarized at -1.1 V vs SCE. LC run time is 9 min. The minimum detectable quantity is 80 pg, and response is linear over at least 5 orders of magnitude. Recovery of vitamin K1 from a milk-based powdered formula was 95.6% with RSD of 7.4%, and from a soy protein-based product, 94.4% recovery with RSD of 6.5%.

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Schneiderman, M. A., Sharma, A. K., Mahanama, K. R., & Locke, D. C. (1988). Determination of vitamin K1 in powdered infant formulas, using supercritical fluid extraction and liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection. Journal - Association of Official Analytical Chemists, 71(4), 815–817. https://doi.org/10.1093/jaoac/71.4.815

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