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Food Chemistry Practical Notes
Ascorbic acid analysis by redox titration
Introduction
Ascorbic acid is a reducing agent and on oxidation forms dehydroascorbic acid. Both these
chemicals have Vitamin C activity although often chemists erroneously assay for ascorbic acid
only. In this class you will assay for ascorbic acid in 2 different foods using the oxidizing agent
dichlorophenolindophenol (DCPIP). DCPIP is also an acid-base indicator having a pink colour in
acid solution and a blue colour in alkaline solution. The reduced form of DCPIP is colourless.
+
C C
C
O
H C O
O O
+ 2H3O+ + 2e –
H H
2 H2O
CHCH2 OH
OH
ascorbic acid dehydroascorbic acid
C C
C
O
H C O
O O
CHCH2 OH
OH
Materials and methods
Foods to be tested
The ascorbic acid content of orange juice is to be determined. By law orange juice must have a
minimum of 400 mg/L Vitamin C – this is the total of ascorbic acid and dehydroascorbic acid. As
well a green vegetable will be tested.
Part I Preparation of ascorbic acid solution.
This section is to be done as a group.
- Weigh approx 0.1 g ascorbic acid accurately.
- Transfer the ascorbic acid into a 100 mL volumetric flask and dissolve in about 20 mL 1 %
metaphosphoric acid. Make to the mark with 1 % metaphosphoric acid.
- Transfer a 25.0 mL aliquot of the ascorbic acid solution into a 250 mL volumetric flask.
Make to the mark with 1 % metaphosphoric acid.
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Part II Standardization of DCPIP.
- Pipette a 10.00 mL aliquot of the approx 0.1 mg/ mL ascorbic acid solution (prepared above)
into an Erlenmeyer flask.
- Titrate with DCPIP until a permanent pink end point. This is not always easy to determine.
- Repeat until triplicate results are obtained.
- Calculate the mass of ascorbic acid that reacts with 1.00 mL DICPIP.
Part III Assay of Ascorbic Acid in Cabbage
- Cut 4 or 5 thin slices of cabbage and chop roughly. You will need about 50 g. Weigh the
cabbage (use the top loading balance set to 2 decimal places).
- Place the cabbage into a blender and add a known mass of 1 % metaphosphoric acid (weigh
about 200 mL – but make sure it is enough to cover the blades of the blender).
- Blend for a minute or two.
- Add a known mass of the extract (about 20 g) into a plastic centrifuge tube.
- Repeat with a second centrifuge tube so that both tubes weigh the same. You must know the
mass of extract in each tube.
- Centrifuge for 5 to 10 minutes.
- Pour the supernatant (the liquid) from each centrifuge tube into the same 200 mL volumetric
flask.
- Add a few mL of metaphosphoric acid to each centrifuge tube to resuspend the pellet.
- Add about 20 mL metaphosphoric acid to each tube so that they are balanced.
- Recentrifuge.
- Carefully pour the supernatant into the same 200 mL volumetric flask (step 7 above).
- Make the flask up to the mark.
- Pipette a 10.0 mL sample into a flask and titrate with DCPIP.
- Consult your demonstrator to determine an appropriate sized aliquot to test next time. Repeat
the titration.
- Calculate the ascorbic acid in the solution and hence in the cabbage itself.
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Part IV Assay of Ascorbic Acid in Orange Juice
- Filter about 30 mL orange juice through glass wool.
- The orange juice is too concentrated to use directly so dilute it 1 in 5 (i.e. 20.0 mL into a 100
mL volumetric flask). In this case for dilution to the mark use the metaphosphoric acid
solution provided.
- Pipette a 10.0 mL aliquot of the diluted orange juice into a flask.
- Titrate with DCPIP until a permanent pink colour is obtained. If the colour is difficult to see
you may add 10 mL water.
- Decide whether the titre is reasonable (is it just right, too high or too low?). Check with your
demonstrator.
- Repeat the titration using a suitable sized aliquot.
- Calculate the amount of ascorbic acid in the diluted orange juice and hence in the orange
juice itself.
Questions for report
- Compare the results with values from Food Composition tables as well as any available label
data.
- Are your answers sensible?
- Comment on the precision of your results.








Jermaine Byrant
Nicole Johnson



