Sugar Analysis Resources: Sugars are simple, soluble carbohydrates that are commonly found in foods, foodstuffs, beverages and other consumer products. Sugars are categorized based on the number of sugar monomers present in the compound: Monosaccharides are comprised of a single sugar molecule (Examples include fructose, glucose, mannose and galactose). Disaccharides are comprised of two sugar molecules (Examples include sucrose and lactose). Longer chains of sugars are categorized as either oligosaccharides or polysaccharides, depending on the number of sugar monomers present in the molecule.
Cornerstone Analytical Laboratories provides sugar analysis by Ion Chromatography with Pulsed Amperometric Detection (IC-PAD). This service can be used to help identify and quantify the sugar content of a wide variety of sample types.
The analysis is limited to mono- and disaccharides. Oligosaccharides and Polysaccharides may be analyzed for monosaccharide content after enzymatic digestion. Contact us for more information.
The following is a list of sugars provided in our routine service. Other sugars may be available – please contact us to learn more:
Sugar analysis can be applied to many types of samples, such as:
Our internal method is designed for application of a wide variety of sample types. The method contains details on each of the general topics below.
Since sugars are water soluble, the preparation is usually limited to dissolving the sample or extracting it into the mobile phase of the analysis. Most samples will be filtered prior to analysis to remove any particulate matter.
The IC-PAD is calibrated externally with solutions of standard grade sugars.
Sample analysis is conducted on an IC-PAD that has previously been calibrated with a series of sugar standards. For the result to be considered valid, all quality control must be within the acceptance criteria.
The sugar concentration of the sample is calculated based on the mass of sample taken for the analysis to give the results on the weight/weight basis, such as ppm or ppb. Results that are below the method limit of quantitation are reported as a less-than value (e.g. <10 ppm).
Results are reported based on the mass of sample taken for the analysis (wt/wt basis). If a sample is not dissolved during the preparation step, the results are reported as “extracted.”
The limit of detection and quantitation are a function of the mass of sample taken for the analysis and the instrument limits. The limit of quantitation of this analysis is easily dialed low by taking a relatively large sample size. Contact us for specific LOD/LOQ we can reach in your sample.
Cornerstone Analytical Laboratories can develop and validate an analytical method for sugar analysis in your sample. Please view our page on method validation for more information on our process of developing and validating methods. Once validated, we can transfer it to your facility.
Click the links below to review other documents relevant to sugar analysis:
Example IC-PAD chromatograms (pending)
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