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Quality Control of Some Water, Food, and

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Quality Control of Some Water, Food, and Drug Samples in Erbil City, Iraq Prof. Dr. Nabil A. Fakhre Dept. of Chemistry, College of Education/ Scientific Depts., Univ ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Quality Control of Some Water, Food, and


1

2
  • Quality Control of Some Water, Food, and
  • Drug Samples in Erbil City, Iraq
  • Prof. Dr. Nabil A. Fakhre
  • Dept. of Chemistry, College of Education/
    Scientific Depts., Univ. of Salahalddin, Erbil,
    IRAQ
  • nabil_fakhri_at_yahoo.com

3
  • Qualitycontrol (QC) is a procedure or set of
    procedures intended to ensure that a manufactured
    product or performed service adheres to a defined
    set of quality criteria or meets the requirements
    of the client or
  • customer.
  • This global quality management system provides
    the basis for analyzing customer requirements,
    defining theprocesses that contribute to the
    achievement of a productor service that is
    acceptable to the customer, and provisions for
    keeping these processes in control.
  • QC activities include general methods such as
    accuracy checks on data acquisition and
    calculations and the use of approved standardized
    procedures for emission calculations,
    measurements, estimating uncertainties, archiving
    information and reporting.
  • Higher tier QC activities include technical
    reviews of source categories, activity and
    emission factor data, and methods.

4
  • SEMI-AUTOMATED DETERMINATION OF NITARATE IN TAP
    WATER SAMPLES USING DIZOTIZATION- COUPLING
    REACTION
  • Nabil A. Fakhre, and Hemen A. Kadir
  • Nitrate is an important intermediate in the
    biogeochemical cycling of nitrogen in natural
    water. Because of the relative stability of the
    nitrate ion, most nitrogenous materials in
    environmental media tend to be converted to
    nitrate. Therefore, all sources of nitrogen
    (including organic nitrogen, ammonia and
    fertilizers) should be considered as potential
    sources of nitrate. Nitrate is relatively
    non-toxic, and it can be converted readily by
    bacteria to nitrite, which is also one of the
    pollutants in the atmosphere and natural water.
    Nitrate, converted to nitrite, may reacted with
    amines (proteins found in some foods,
    medications, and water) to produce nitrosamines,
    which have been found to be carcinogenic in
    animals. Some of types of cancer linked to this
    reaction.
  • The maximum contaminated level for nitrate in
    drinking water is 45 ppm, and the value of total
    nitrogen at the outlet of wastewater plant or in
    rivers and lakes should be below 18 ppm, which
    equivalent to about 59 ppm of nitrite and 79.7
    ppm nitrate.
  • Semi- automated method has been investigated for
    the determination of nitrate depending upon the
    reduction of nitrate to nitrite using a
    mini-column of amalgamated cadmium redactor. The
    produced nitrite was reacted with N,
    N-dimethyl-p-phenylenediamine dihydrochloride
    (NDMPDAH), to produce a water soluble, colorless
    diazonium ion, which subsequently coupled with
    resorcinol to form an azo dye in the alkali
    medium to be detected in a spectrophotometer with
    a flow cell of 30 ul. Nitrate was determined in
    the concentration range (0.3- 6.0) ppm with
    detection limit 0.15 ppm and sampling rate of 60
    samples/h.
  • The method is with acceptable precision and
    accuracy depending upon the values of relative
    standard deviation and relative error percentage.
    The effect of 35 cations and anions on the
    determination of nitrate was studied. To
    eliminate the influence of some cations two
    methods have been used column of cationic
    exchanger and EDTA solution.
  • The method was applied successfully for
    determination of nitrate in various wastewater
    samples in different locations in Erbil City
    after the removal of turbidity, oil and grease.
    The results were compared to those obtained with
    standard NEDA method.
  •  

5
  • Extraction-Spectrophotometric Determination of
    Nitrate in Polluted Water and Soil Samples using
    Diazo-Coupling Reaction

  • Chinar M. Rasheed and Nabil A. Fakhre

  • Department of Chemistry, College of Education,
    University of Salahalddin, Erbil, Iraq
  •  
  • Abstract
  • A simple and sensitive spectrophotometric
    method was described for the determination of
    nitrate. The method is based on the reaction of
    nitrite with 3-amino-5-methyl isoxazole to form a
    diazonium ion, which is coupled with resorcinol
    in an alkaline medium to form the azo dye, with a
    maximum absorption at 354 nm. Nitrate is
    determined by its reduction to nitrite using
    amalgamated cadmium column. Beers law is obeyed
    over the range of 0.04-6 ?g/ml, with a detection
    limit of 0.02?g/ml. The molar absorptivity,
    Sandell index are 2.482 x 104 L/mol.Cm and
    0.00249 ?g/ml respectively . The effect of 35
    cations and anions were studied. The method was
    applied for determination of nitrate in polluted
    water and soil samples, the results were
    compaired with the standard method, NEDA. The
    prepared azo dye was extracted into 11 (v/v)
    mixture of isoamyl alcohol-isobutyl methyl
    ketone. Nitrate was determined over the range of
    0.005-2 ?g/ml with a detection limit of 0.003
    ?g/ml and molar absorptivity 6.486 x 104 L/mol.
    cm.

6
  • Spectrophotometric Determination of Nitrite in
    Curing Meat Samples
  •  
  • Nabil A. Fakhre and Hemn A. Qader
  •  
  • Nitrite ion is an important intermediate
    in biological nitrogen cycle and is present in
    soils and surface waters. Nitrite is also a
    versatile chemical agent, which has found
    numerous applications ranging from dye
    manufacture to food preservation. Alkali nitrites
    and nitrates, along with sodium chloride have
    long been used in the curing of meat products to
    prevent bacterial spoilage and to enhance the
    flavor, color and texture of these food products.
    Nitrite oxidizes hemoglobin to methemoglobin,
    which is unable to transport oxygen, and nitrites
    react with amines and amides to form
    nitrosamines, which are potent carcinogens.
    Current legislation (EU Directive 95/2) suggests
    maximum amounts to be added at the beginning of
    processing in various meat products and imposes a
    maximum residue of 50 µg/ml nitrites and 250
    µg/ml nitrates in cured meat products that have
    not been thermally treated.
  • The nitrite content in meat products has been
    regulated and the majority of the analytical
    methods recommended by the legislations of
    different countries to determine its content are
    based on the Saltzman modification of the
    classical Griees method. Many methods have been
    reported for the spectrophotometric determination
    of nitrite .
  • In the present work, a simple procedure for the
    spectrophotometric determination of nitrite is
    described. The method is based on the reaction of
    acidified 2-aminobenzoimidazole as the
    diazotizing agent with nitrite to produce water
    solublediazoniumion, which subsequently coupled
    with orcinol to give azo dye having maximum
    absorption at305nm. The method has been
    successfully applied to the determination of
    nitrite in curing meat samples.
  •  

7
  • DETERMINATION of ACRYLAMIDE in POTATO CHIPS
    SAMPLES USING DIFFERENT ANALYTICAL TECHNIQUES
  •  
  • Nabil A. Fakhre and Bnar M. Ibrahim
  • Chemistry Department, College of Education
    /Scientific Departments,University of Salahaddin,
    Erbil / Kurdistan Region, Iraq
  • havras_at_yahoo.com
  •  
  • Acrylamide is formed in some foods cooked
    at high temperature (120-170ºC) by the reaction
    of the amino acid asparagines with a reducing
    sugar such as glucose. Acrylamide is genotoxic
    and carcinogenic in studies in animals. It causes
    increased tumour incidence at a variety of sites.
    The international agency on research on cancer
    has classified acrylamide as probably
    carcinogenic to humans. Two sensitive and fast
    batch and flow-injection spectrophotometric
    methods for the determination of acrylamide are
    proposed. The methods were based on
    oxidation-reduction reaction of acrylamide with
    potassium permanganate. The calibration graphs
    are linear over the ranges 1.08.0 and
    2.0-13µg/ml of acrylamide, with detection limits
    of 0.6 and 1.0µg/ml, respectively. The methods
    are applied to the routine analysis of acrylamide
    in potato chips samples. It confirms that the
    analytical procedure employed for the analysis is
    suitable and reliable for its intended use.
    Acrylamide was also determined in the presence of
    glucose and asparagines. Reduction of some
    cationic interference was carried out in the
    batch and flow injection analysis using cationic
    exchanger of hydrogen form with 2.5 mm internal
    diameter, 15-cm length of packing and flow rate
    0.5 ml/min. The proposed first and second
    derivative methods for determination of
    acrylamide, are simple, rapid (as it only
    requires measurements of nD values at a single
    wavelength). They were used for identification of
    the acrylamide depending upon characteristic
    peaks at certain wavelengths or ranges. The first
    and second derivative spectra of the mentioned
    compound have been used for determination of the
    compounds at different ranges of concentration
    depending upon the measurements of the heights of
    the peak to the baseline at certain wavelengths.
    HPLC was used as a standard method for
    qualification and quatitation of acryl amide in
    different potato chips samples, and the results
    obtained were agreed with those of the proposed
    methods.

8
  • Online separation and preconcentration for
    histamine determination
  • in fish meal using cation exchanger resin
  •  Nabil A. Fakhre and Mohammad S. Abdulla
  •   Biogenic amines are a group of biologically
    active organic compounds normally produced by
    decarboxylation of free amino acids. Biogenic
    amines are present in a variety of foods and have
    been widely documented as occurring in fish and
    fish products, meat, wine, cheese and fermented
    foods. The presence of biogenic amines in these
    foods is an indication of food spoilage which is
    dependent upon the availability of free amino.
  • Histamine, which is the most important biogenic
    amine, can cause poisoning as a result of the
    ingestion of food containing high levels of this
    amine.
  • To a series of 25 ml volumetric flasks, 4.0 ml
    of 0.2 p-toluidine (prepared in 0.5M HCl), 0.5
    ml of 0.5 sodium nitrite, 12.5 to 175 µg of
    histamine and 2.0 ml of 1M KOH were added. The
    solution completed to mark with ethanol after two
    minutes. Absorbance measurements were carried out
    against reagent blank. Fig. 2-2 shows FI
    manifold used for histamine determination. A
    multi channel peristaltic pump was used for
    propelling p-toluidine (0.5 in 1M hydrochloric
    acid) solution, 0.5 sodium nitrite solution and
    1M potassium hydroxide solution, with flow rates
    0.9, 0.8 and 0.4 ml/min for solutions
    respectively. A 175 µl of histamine sample was
    injected through the injection valve. Three
    reaction coils were used in the system with
    lengths 5cm (RC1), 40cm (RC2) and 40cm (RC3). The
    merged streams were passed through a quartz flow
    cell (30 µl, 10 mm path length) in a
    spectrophotometer.

9
  • FlOW-INJECTION SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC DETERMINATION
    OF CHLOROGENIC ACID IN SOME NATURAL SAMPLES
  • Nabil, Adil Fakhre and Rizgar Mohamad Hassan
  •  
  • Polyphenols, are a group of chemical substances
    present in plants which play an important role
    during enzymatic browning. They are responsible
    for the color of many plants, such as apples
    part of the taste and flavor of beverages (apple
    juice, tea). Chlorogenic acid (CGA) is a major
    phenolic natural product isolated from the leaves
    and fruits of dicotyledonous plants, including
    the coffee beans which typically contain 5-8 of
    CGA. Biologically, it is an important polyphenol
    it is found widely in plants, black teas, soya
    beans, wheat, apple juice, tobacco, some
    traditional Chinese medicines, beers, wines,
    Chinese herbs2 and accounting for gt 75 of the
    total phenolic acids content extracted from the
    eggplant sample, also the presence of CGA in
    sunflower seeds is well-known.
  • CGA not only has the function of antioxidation,
    inhibiting hypertension and stimulating the
    flowering of plants, but also affects the
    activity of trypsin, amylase and other enzymes.
    CGA is the main component producing the bitter
    taste in crude coffee and thus deliberative
    elimination of CGA into the instant coffee has
    been adopted extensively to improve the taste of
    various kinds of coffees. The contents of CGA in
    different areas and in various foods are also
    quite different. Therefore, it is very important
    to establish some quantitative methods to monitor
    the concentration of CGA in all kinds of real
    samples.
  • A flow-injection spectrophotometric system was
    applied for determination of chlorogenic acid
    using 3-amino-5-methylisoxazole as diazotizing
    agent in the linear range of 1.0-50.0 ?g/ml, with
    the sample volume of 175 µl and the detection
    limit of 0.30 ?g/ml. The rate of sampling was 60
    samples/h, with the RSD and Error of 2.254 and
    3.4966, respectively. The influences of
    seventeen phenolic compounds (as interferences)
    such as dopamine, tyrosine, catechol, tannin, 2,
    4-dihydroxybenzoic acid, caffeic acid and
    p-cresol on determination of chlorogenic acid
    were studied. An ultrasonic technique was used
    for extracting chlorogenic acid in the samples by
    using 80 (v/v) methanol aqueous solution. The
    proposed method was successfully applied for the
    determination of chlorogenic acid content in
    various natural samples such as grape, tobacco
    and black tea.

10
  • Studies on Physico - Chemical Characteristics of
    Some Edible Oils
  • and
  • Authentication of Triacylglycerols using HPLC
  • Nabil A. Fakhre and Hemen K. Kadir
  • The aim of the study
  • It is intended to study the properties of some of
    edible oil samples through the phsico - chemical
    tests like (refractive index, specific gravity,
    viscosity, iodine value, peroxide value,
    percentage of free fatty acid and pH value). The
    study aims to shed more light on the oil acidity
    and composition of saturated and unsaturated
    fatty acids.
  • The adulteration was the second aim of the
    present study using (RP-HPLC/RI detector) to
    confirm authenticity of triacylglycerols and to
    identify the composition of blends of some edible
    vegetable oils.

11
  • FLOW-INJECTION AND STOPPED FLOW
    SPECTROPHOTOMETRIC DETERMINATION OF DOPAMINE
    HYDROCHLORIDE IN PHARMACEUTICAL PREPARATIONS
  • Nabil A. Fakhre, and Mohamad S. Abdullah
  • Dept. of Chemistry, College of Science Education,
    Univ. of Salahaddin, Erbil, IRAQ.
  • havras_at_yahoo.com
  • Key words Flow-injection, Stopped flow,
    Spectrophotometric determination, Dopamine.
  • The catecholamines participate in the regulation
    of a wide variety of physiological function in
    humans. In principle they control cardiac output
    and apportion blood flow. Dopamine is one of most
    significant catecholamines. It is naturally
    occurring amine used for treatment of acute
    congestive failure and renal failure. Dopamine
    hydrochloride is determined by flow injection and
    stopped-flow. The assay depends on the
    nitrosation of the aromatic ring followed by
    forming a stable colored compound in alkali
    medium. The reaction has a maximum absorption at
    377nm. The method obeyed Beer s law in the range
    40-160µg/ml. The number of sample throughput is
    35s/hour with injected sample 200µl. To increase
    the sensitivity of the method stopping flow of
    the reaction zone in the flow cell at a regulated
    time after the injection of sample was made. The
    optimum time of stopping was 60 sec. The method
    obeyed Beer s law in the range 15-120 µg/ml.
    Both methods were applied for determination of
    dopamine hydrochloride in pharmaceutical
    preparation with recoveries 95.0-97.0.

12
  • Flow injection Spectrophotometric Determination
    of Folic Acid in Some
  • Pharmaceutical Preparations using
    Diazotizing-Coupling Method
  • Nabil Adil Fakhre and Mohammad Salim Abdullah
  • Folic acid (FA) is extremely important vitamin
    that occurs naturally in foods. It is essential
    for human. Folacin is a generic name covering FA
    and related compounds having the same biochemical
    activities of FA. Folic acid and folate (the
    anion form) are forms of water soluble B-vitamins
    ( Champe and Harvey,1994). It plays a key role in
    one-carbon metabolism, and is essential for the
    biosynthesis of the purines and pyrimidines.
    Folic acid deficiency is probably the most common
    vitamin in USA, particularly among pregnant women
    and alcoholism ( Marks et.al,1996) . Folic acid
    helps form building blocks of DNA, the body
    genetic information, and building blocks of
    RNA, needed for protein synthesis in all cells.
  • The present study describes a simple, rapid and
    sensitive method for the determination of folic
    acid at 435nm. Folic acid was diazotizated with
    nitrous acid then coupled with sulphanilic acid.
    Nitrous acid (0.5 NaNO2 in 0.5M HCl), 0.1
    sulphanilic acid and 0.25M sodium hydroxide
    solutions were propelled at flow rates 0.6ml/min.
    Folic acid solution (10µg/ml) was injected with
    sample volume 125µl to react with the nitrous
    acid solution in a reaction coil of 10-cm. The
    proposed flow system method was linear in the
    range 6.0 to 25.0 µg/ml. The precision and
    accuracy of the methods were checked. The effects
    of foreign species were tested. The proposed
    method was successfully applied to the
    determination of folic acid in commercial folic
    acid tablets. The results are compared with that
    of standard method (HPLC).

13
  • Determination of Gasoline and Kerosene in a
    Mixture Using Peak-to -Peak Derivative
    Spectroscopic Method
  • Nabil A. Fakhre
  • Although UV-visible spectra do not enable
    absolute identification of an unknown substance,
    they frequently are used to confirm identity
    through comparison of the measured spectrum with
    a reference spectrum. Typical multispectral
    analysis methods treat each spectral band as an
    independent variable, a reasonable assumption for
    multispectral data but not really appropriate for
    hyperspectral data. In spectroscopy, particularly
    in infra-red, UV and visible absorption,
    fluorescence, and reflectance spectrophotometry,
    differentiation of spectra is a widely used
    technique, referred to as derivative
    spectroscopy. Derivative spectroscopy has the
    potential of greatly increasing the application
    of UV-visible spectroscopy. Derivative methods
    have been used in analytical spectroscopy for
    three main purposes, spectral discrimination,
    spectral resolution enhancements, and
    quantitative analysis. Therefore, a simple and
    rapid method is described for the simultaneous
    quantitative analysis of gasoline and kerosene in
    a mixture using first, second, third and fourth
    derivative spectroscopy. Peak-to-peak heights
    were used to find various concentration ranges of
    gasoline and kerosene. First derivative spectra
    were used for determination of 10-60 and 40-80
    Gasoline and 40-90 and 20-60 kerosene. Whereas
    second and third derivative spectra have been
    used for determination of 40-80 gasoline and
    20-60 kerosene. Fourth derivative spectra were
    used for determination of 20-80 gasoline and
    kerosene.

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