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First order derivative spectra to determine caffeine and chlorogenic acids in defective and nondefective coffee beans

Daniel Habtamu, +1 more
- 27 Jul 2020 - 
- Vol. 8, Iss: 9, pp 4757-4762
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TLDR
The application of the first order derivative spectra was employed to determine the levels of caffeine (CAF) and chlorogenic acids (CGA) in defective and nondefective coffee beans without using extraction or background correction techniques and could be a valuable quality control technique.
Abstract
In this research, the application of the first order derivative spectra was employed to determine the levels of caffeine (CAF) and chlorogenic acids (CGA) in defective (immature, black, and sour) and nondefective coffee beans without using extraction or background correction techniques. The extreme points of first order derivate spectra of these compounds were at the wavelength of 260 and 292 nm enable to quantify the contents of CAF and CGA, respectively. The level of CAF and CGA in coffee beans determined by this method is ranged from 1.2 ± 0.12-1.46 ± 0.47% and 4.04 ± 0.44-4.43 ± 0.43%, respectively. The study results also indicated total contents of CAF and CGA levels discriminate the defective and nondefective coffee beans with higher CAF and CGA contents being observed in defective coffee beans. As the method is extremely rapid, easy, and inexpensive and also requires minimal sample preparation for the quantification of CAF and CGA contents in coffee, it could be a valuable quality control technique.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid and simultaneous determination of trigonelline, caffeine, and chlorogenic acid in green coffee bean extract.

TL;DR: The proposed method represents acceptable linearity for trigonelline, caffeine, and chlorogenic acid and could be used in coffee industries for quality control and geographical origin traceability studies of green coffee samples.
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Rapid Identification of the Chemical Components of Ilex rotunda Thunb Using UPLC-Q-TOF-MS/MS

TL;DR: In this paper, a preliminary analysis was performed to identify and obtain the chemical components from Ilicis Rotundae Cortex (IRC) to better control the quality of the medicinal materials and provide a chemical basis for the study of the active components.
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Coffee by-products: An underexplored source of prebiotic ingredients.

TL;DR: In this article , the possibility to use coffee by-products as relevant sources of prebiotic ingredients is ascertained, and a review shows how coffee byproducts can be interesting for the development of functional foods, contributing to sustainability, circular economy, food security, and health.
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Exogenous application of bioregulators in Coffea arabica beans during ripening: Investigation of UV-Visible and NIR mixture design-fingerprints using AComDim-ICA

TL;DR: In this article , the influence of exogenous application of bioregulators on C. arabica beans was investigated by using principal components analysis (PCA) to identify the discriminating solvent, obtained from statistical mixture design.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Coffee and Health: A Review of Recent Human Research

TL;DR: Current available evidence suggests that it may be prudent for pregnant women to limit coffee consumption to 3 cups/d providing no more than 300 mg/d of caffeine to exclude any increased probability of spontaneous abortion or impaired fetal growth, and there is little evidence that coffee consumption increases the risk of cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of roasting on the formation of chlorogenic acid lactones in coffee.

TL;DR: The levels of lactones in roasted coffee do not reflect the levels of precursors in green coffee, suggesting that roasting causes isomerization of chlorogenic acids prior to the formation of lactone levels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlation between cup quality and chemical attributes of Brazilian coffee

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the correlation between cup quality and the levels of sucrose, caffeine, trigonelline and chlorogenic acids, determined by HPLC analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Caffeine, trigonelline, chlorogenic acids and sucrose diversity in wild Coffea arabica L. and C. Canephora P. accessions

TL;DR: The biochemical diversity of wild accessions originating from Ethiopia and Kenya for C. arabica and C. canephora revealed that the two species showed significant accession differences for all compounds, and between-species-average-content comparison confirms that C. arabica showed more trigonelline and sucrose and that C-canephora presented more CGA and caffeine.
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