Determination of sulfite in food by flow injection analysis.

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Abstract

A method is described for the determination of sulfite levels in food products by flow injection analysis (FIA). The method is based on the decolorization of malachite green by SO2, which is isolated from the flowing sample stream by means of a gas diffusion cell. The FIA method has a detection limit in food sample extracts of 0.1 ppm SO2 (3 times peak height of blank), which corresponds to 1-10 ppm SO2 in a food product, depending on the extraction procedure used. At the 5 ppm SO2 level in a food extract, the precision of replicate injections is +/- 1-2%. The method was tested on a variety of both sulfite-treated and untreated food products and the results compared favorably with those obtained by the Monier-Williams, colorimetric (pararosaniline), and enzymatic (sulfite oxidase) methods. The average differences from the FIA results were 19, 11, and 12%, respectively, for those samples (n = 12) above 50 ppm SO2. At lower levels the results were somewhat more erratic due to inaccuracies of the various methods at low concentrations.

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Sullivan, J. J., Hollingworth, T. A., Wekell, M. M., Newton, R. T., & Larose, J. E. (1986). Determination of sulfite in food by flow injection analysis. Journal - Association of Official Analytical Chemists, 69(3), 542–546. https://doi.org/10.1093/jaoac/69.3.542

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