Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy

Indigenous leaves are kind of vegetables with full of nutritional composition as compared to tropical vegetables, which are rich sources of essential vitamins and also rich in antioxidant. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is a well-known function as antioxidant which has the potential to inhibit the oxidat...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah, Sulaiman, Azli
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/83898/
http://eproceedings.chemistry.utm.my/index.php/FYP/article/view/313/pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.utm.83898
record_format eprints
spelling my.utm.838982019-11-11T08:45:52Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/83898/ Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah Sulaiman, Azli QD Chemistry Indigenous leaves are kind of vegetables with full of nutritional composition as compared to tropical vegetables, which are rich sources of essential vitamins and also rich in antioxidant. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is a well-known function as antioxidant which has the potential to inhibit the oxidative damage in body cells by trapping free radicals. In this study, the concentration of ascorbic acid in indigenous leaves was determined. Samples of indigenous leaves such as tenggek burung (Euodia redlevi), ulam raja (Cosmos Caudatus) and pegaga (Centella asiatica) were extracted by an ultrasonic extraction technique prior to the determination of ascorbic acid by fluorescence spectroscopy. The extraction parameters such as types of solvent, concentration of solvent, time of extraction, temperature of extraction and sample weight were optimized. The samples were extracted utilizing optimum parameters which were 1.4 g of the sample in 0.175 M sulphuric acid at 45 °C for 50 minutes. The result showed the ascorbic acid content for wet samples in tenggek burung, pegaga and ulam raja were 0.0145 mg/g, 0.0237 mg/g and 0.0309 mg/g while for dry samples were 0.0136 mg/g, 0.0214 mg/g and 0.0287 mg/g. It is proven that indigenous leaves were natural sources of ascorbic acid. 2018 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah and Sulaiman, Azli (2018) Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy. In: eProceedings Chemistry, 1 December 2018 through 31 December 2018, Malaysia. http://eproceedings.chemistry.utm.my/index.php/FYP/article/view/313/pdf
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic QD Chemistry
spellingShingle QD Chemistry
A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah
Sulaiman, Azli
Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
description Indigenous leaves are kind of vegetables with full of nutritional composition as compared to tropical vegetables, which are rich sources of essential vitamins and also rich in antioxidant. Ascorbic acid (vitamin C) is a well-known function as antioxidant which has the potential to inhibit the oxidative damage in body cells by trapping free radicals. In this study, the concentration of ascorbic acid in indigenous leaves was determined. Samples of indigenous leaves such as tenggek burung (Euodia redlevi), ulam raja (Cosmos Caudatus) and pegaga (Centella asiatica) were extracted by an ultrasonic extraction technique prior to the determination of ascorbic acid by fluorescence spectroscopy. The extraction parameters such as types of solvent, concentration of solvent, time of extraction, temperature of extraction and sample weight were optimized. The samples were extracted utilizing optimum parameters which were 1.4 g of the sample in 0.175 M sulphuric acid at 45 °C for 50 minutes. The result showed the ascorbic acid content for wet samples in tenggek burung, pegaga and ulam raja were 0.0145 mg/g, 0.0237 mg/g and 0.0309 mg/g while for dry samples were 0.0136 mg/g, 0.0214 mg/g and 0.0287 mg/g. It is proven that indigenous leaves were natural sources of ascorbic acid.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah
Sulaiman, Azli
author_facet A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah
Sulaiman, Azli
author_sort A. Bakar, Nurul Farehah
title Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
title_short Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
title_full Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
title_fullStr Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
title_full_unstemmed Ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
title_sort ultrasonic extraction of ascorbic acid from indigenous leaves prior to detection by fluorescence spectroscopy
publishDate 2018
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/83898/
http://eproceedings.chemistry.utm.my/index.php/FYP/article/view/313/pdf
_version_ 1654960031506890752
score 13.211869