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Sample preparation for aflatoxin assay: The nature of the problem and approaches to a solution
Author(s) -
Stoloff L.,
Campbell A. D.,
Beckwith A. C.,
Nesheim S.,
Winbush J. S.,
Fordham O. M.
Publication year - 1969
Publication title -
journal of the american oil chemists' society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1558-9331
pISSN - 0003-021X
DOI - 10.1007/bf02540627
Subject(s) - grind , mathematics , sample (material) , mill , grinding , mixing (physics) , aflatoxin , pulverizer , comminution , environmental science , process engineering , pulp and paper industry , materials science , mechanical engineering , engineering , chemistry , physics , metallurgy , chromatography , food science , quantum mechanics
Cases have been reported of individual peanuts, cottonseeds or Brazil nuts so highly contaminated with aflatoxin that, for a 50 g portion to be representative of the whole, the sample preparation procedures should grind each unit to a large number of particles and distribute them uniformly throughout the sample. Assuming uniform contamination of the individual kernel, each 50 g sample should contain 1/100 of that kernel. Even though these extreme cases may be encountered only infrequently, the more usual situation still presents difficulties because of great variability in individual kernel contamination. However, if the extreme can be handled, one can expect to handle the more usual situation. Equipment and procedures to achieve this distribution goal are described. The equipment studied includes a food chopper (Hobart), a nut mill (Thomas Mills), a disc mill (Bauer), a hammer mill (Fitzpatrick Model D comminuting machine), a hammer mill designed specifically for peanut samples (Dicken’s subsampling mill), a Polytron homogenizer (Bronwill Scientific), a vertical cutter‐mixer (Hobart), and a sample splitter (Jones riffle). Commodities examined were shelled peanuts and in‐shell Brazil nuts, walnuts, pecans and almonds. Comminution and mixing effectiveness were determined by particle size analysis, by distribution of kernels made radioactive by neutron activation and by aflatoxin analysis of naturally contaminated products. From the results we conclude that the ultimate in sample uniformity can be achieved with a disc mill, solvent addition to obtain a fluid system and mixing and grinding of the fluid with a dispersion mixer‐grinder. A practical uniformity can be achieved in a vertical cutter‐mixer with less expenditure of time and effort for the commodities studied.