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ISSN 2457-9459 (Online)
ISSN-L 0576-9787 (Print)


2023

Journal Citation Reports
Impact factor 2023: 1.3
5-Year Impact Factor: 1.2
Article Influence® Score: 0.140
Ranked 9 out of 23
MATERIALS SCIENCE, PAPER & WOOD (Q2)

Scopus
CiteScore 2023: 2.3
SNIP: 0.405

SCImago
SJR: 0.264
H-Index: 42
Ranked Q3

 

Title
Olive pits-based carbon black agglomerate as an adsorbent for pipette-tip solid-phase extraction for the determination of caffeine in energy drinks
Authors
ASHLY A. ROSALES GÓMES, AXEL M. RAMOS DOBLADO, MARÍA F. CALLEJAS TABORA, SUANY Y. ZELAYA NASSER, FREDY A. RODRÍGUEZ-RIVAS, HENRY DANIEL PONCE-RODRIGUEZ, ÁLVARO CABALLERO and JUAN DOMÍNGUEZ-ROBLES,

Received March 1, 2024
Published Volume 58 Issue 5-6 May-June
Keywords carbon black agglomerates, microextraction, pipette-tip solid-phase extraction, energy drinks, caffeine

Abstract
Vegetal wastes are an interesting source for the synthesis of nanostructured carbon materials, which are potentially useful in various applications. Carbon black agglomerates (CBA) obtained from olive pits, synthesized in our previous research, had a low crystalline structure typical of this type of materials, with a pore size of 2.27 nm, confirming their micro/mesoporous structure, and with a high surface value of around 587 m2/g. These materials were used for the extraction of caffeine in energy drinks using a green-approach micro-sample technique called pipette-tip solid-phase extraction. This microextraction technique features reduced consumption of organic solvents, of the amount of sorbent and extraction time, thus making the whole sample pretreatment process faster and greener. In this work, we proposed an analytical method for the analysis of caffeine in commercial energy drinks, using CBA with a great extraction capacity due to its high porous surface area. The developed methodology has proven to be useful from a green chemistry point of view, using only one milligram of nanostructured sorbent, minimal solvent consumption, a reduced volume of sample, as well as easy and rapid automatization for the analysis of commercial energy drinks. For the quantification of the analyte in the energy drinks, a one-point standard addition calibration was applied to correct the matrix effect. Similar caffeine concentrations per milliliter were found in the three analyzed samples, likewise, the amounts of caffeine close to those reported by the manufacturers were established for two of the samples analyzed.


Link https://doi.org/10.35812/CelluloseChemTechnol.2024.58.57

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