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Nailing Melamine
Infrared rays
can easily detect the contaminant in milk
in september 2008, milk contaminated with
a chemical called melamine led to renal complications in 300,000
children of China; six died. This chemical, used in producing
plastics and glues, is also used in food adulteration. The
high nitrogen content in the chemical can make food look more
nutritious by increasing the measurable protein content of
the food. The scare made its way to India and milk powder
imported from China was banned.
The various methods used so far to detect
this food pollutant are time-consuming and costly. For example,
the Food and Drug Administration, usa, uses a method called
mass spectroscopy. Though this method can detect very low
levels of melamine, the sample preparation is time-consuming
and labour-intensive. In other methods, the instruments used
are costly.
As a solution to this, researchers from Indiana and Purdue
Universities in the US have found that infrared rays can help
detect melamine in milk powder in less than five minutes.
The researchers tried a method called
infrared spectroscopy which uses a device that hits the milk
powder with infrared rays. The device then calculates the
wavelengths of infrared rays that the powdered milk absorbs.
Each chemical substance absorbs a wavelength that is specific
to it. This is its fingerprint. That of melamine is known.
So all that is needed after that is a trained chemist who
knows how to read the the graph of the absorbed wavelengths
and determine what compounds are indicated by specific peaks.
Quick and cheap, the method could be conveniently
used for screening milk powders for melamine.
The researchers said that the study, published
in the May 27 issue of Agriculture and Food Chemistry is the
first documented attempt to detect melamine in milk powders
(infant formula) using infrared spectroscopy.
Lisa Mauer, the lead author of the paper,
said that though this method has been used to detect several
types of adulteration, detection of melamine has never been
attempted before because water interferes with the infrared
imagery of melamine.
However, this team detected melamine in
powdered milk. The dry powders are much better candidates
for infrared spectroscopic verification, explained Mauer.
Source: Down To Earth
Date: June, 2009

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