Cellulose is most abundant in nature and it is a major structural polysaccharide in plants. Cellulose is composed of linear chain of glucose units which is linked together by beta glycosidic bonds.
Principle
Cellulose undergoes acetolysis with acetic/nitric reagent forming acetylated cellodextrins wich gets dissolved and hydrolyzed to form glucose molecules on treatment with 67% H2SO4. This glucose molecule is dehydrated to form hydroxymethyl furfural which forms green colored product with anthrone and the color intensity is measured at 630nm.
Materials
- Acetic/Nitric Reagent: Mix 150ml of 80% acetic acid and 15mL of concentrated nitric acid.
- Anthrone: Dissolve 200mg anthrone in 100mL of ice-cold 95% sulphuric acid. Prepare fresh and chill for 2h before use.
- 67% sulphuric acid
- Add 3mL acetic/nitric reagent to a known amount (0.5g or 1g) of the sample in a test tube and mix in a vortex mixture.
- Place the tube in a water bath at 100°C for 30min.
- Cool and then centrifuge the contents for 15-20min.
- Discard the supernatant.
- Wash the residue with distilled water.
- Add 10mL of 67% sulphuric acid and allow it to stand for 1h.
- Dilute 1mL of the above solution to 100mL.
- To 1mL of this diluted solution, add 10mL of anthrone reagent and mix well.
- Heat the tubes in boiling water bath for 10min.
- Cool and measure the color at 630nm.
- Set a blank with anthrone reagent and distilled water.
- Take 100mg cellulose in a test tube and proceed from step No. 6 for standard. Instead of just taking 1mL of the diluted solution (Step 7) take a series of volumes (say 0.4 to 2mL corresponding to 40-200mg of cellulose) and develop the color.
1. Updegroff, D M (1969) Anal Biochem.
No comments:
Post a Comment