Determination of the concentration of alum additive in deep-fried dough sticks using dielectric spectroscopy.

J Food Drug Anal

College of Food Science and Technology, Shanghai Ocean University, Lingang New City, Shanghai 201306, China. Electronic address:

Published: September 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers evaluated how the concentration of alum in deep-fried dough sticks correlates with their dielectric properties using a coaxial probe method across a 0.3-10 GHz frequency range.
  • They identified a strong relationship between dielectric loss and alum content, establishing a reliable method that distinguishes alum based on its unique dielectric response around 1 GHz.
  • The technique was validated against a standard measurement method, confirming its effectiveness in accurately detecting the alum dosage in commercial samples with a minimal error margin.

Article Abstract

The concentration of alum additive in deep-fried dough sticks (DFDSs) was investigated using a coaxial probe method based on dielectric properties in the 0.3-10-GHz frequency range. The dielectric spectra of aqueous solutions with different concentrations of alum, sodium bicarbonate, and mixtures thereof were used. The correspondence between dielectric loss and alum concentration was thereby revealed. A steady, uniform correspondence was successfully established by introducing ω·ε″(ω), the sum of dielectric loss and conductor loss (i.e., total loss), according to the electrical conductivity of the alum-containing aqueous solutions. Specific, resonant-type dielectric dispersion arising from alum due to atomic polarization was identified around 1 GHz. This was used to discriminate the alum additive in the DFDS from other ingredients. A quantitative relationship between alum and sodium bicarbonate concentrations in the aqueous solutions and the differential dielectric loss Δε″(ω) at 0.425 GHz was also established with a regression coefficient over 0.99. With the intention of eliminating the effects of the chemical reactions with sodium bicarbonate and the physical processes involved in leavening and frying during preparation, the developed technique was successfully applied to detect the alum dosage in a commercial DFDS (0.9942 g/L). The detected value agreed well with that determined using graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry (0.9722 g/L). The relative error was 2.2%. The results show that the proposed dielectric differential dispersion and loss technique is a suitable and effective method for determining the alum content in DFDSs.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9351792PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jfda.2014.10.003DOI Listing

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