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GB 5009.227-2016   National Food Safety Standard - Determination of peroxide value in food (English Version)
Standard No.: GB 5009.227-2016 Status:superseded remind me the status change

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,2024-9-6,2017-3-1,42C57CB19A54E6711474801214743
Standard No.: GB 5009.227-2016
English Name: National Food Safety Standard - Determination of peroxide value in food
Chinese Name: 食品安全国家标准 食品中过氧化值的测定
Professional Classification: GB    National Standard
Source Content Issued by: National Health and Family Planning Commission
Issued on: 2016-08-31
Implemented on: 2017-3-1
Status: superseded
Superseded by:GB 5009.227-2023 National food safety standard - Determination of peroxide value in foods
Superseded on:2024-9-6
Superseding:GB/T 5009.37-2003 Method for analysis of hygienic standard of edible oils
GB/T 5538-2005 Animal and vegetable fats and oils - Determination of peroxide value
SN/T 0801.3-2011 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils for Export. Determination of Peroxide Value
Target Language: English
File Format: PDF
Word Count: 3500 words
Translation Price(USD): 70.0
Delivery: via email in 1 business day
Codeofchina.com is in charge of this English translation. In case of any doubt about the English translation, the Chinese original shall be considered as authoritative. This standard replaces GB/T5538-2005 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils - Determination of Peroxide Value, SN/T 0801.3-2011 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils for Export - Method for the Determination of Peroxide Value and Section 4.2 Peroxide value specified in GB/T5009.37-2003 Method for Analysis of Hygienic Standard of Edible Oils. Compared with Section 4.2 “Peroxide value” specified in GB/T5009.37- 2003, the main changes are as follows: ——The standard is renamed as “National Food Safety Standard - Determination of Peroxide Value in Foods”; ——The concentration of standard titration solution of sodium thiosulfate in Method I is modified; ——Method II "Colorimetry" is deleted and replaced by "Potentiometric Titration"; ——The scope of application of the methods is added; ——The section of "Sample preparation" is added. National Food Safety Standard - Determination of Peroxide Value in Foods 1 Scope This standard specifies two determination methods for peroxide value in foods: titration and potentiometric titration. Method I in this standard is applicable to edible animal and vegetable fats and oils, edible fat and oil products, foods made of wheat flour, cereal, nuts and other vegetable food through processing techniques such as frying, puffing, baking, brewing and sauting, as well as those made of animal food through the processing techniques such as quick freezing, dry processing and salting away; Method II is applicable to animal and vegetable fats and oils and margarine with the measurement range of 0 g/100g ~ 0.38 g/100g. This standard is not applicable to determination of embedded fat and oil products like vegetable fat powder. Method 1 Titration 2 Theory The oil and fat specimen prepared will be dissolved in trichloromethane and glacial acetic acid, during which the peroxide will react with potassium iodide to produce iodine that will be titrated by sodium thiosulfate standard solution. The amount of peroxide value shall be expressed by the mass fraction of the peroxide equivalent to iodine or the mill mole quantity of the active oxygen in 1 kg of the sample. 3 Reagents and Materials Unless otherwise specified, analytically-pure reagents and Class III water (defined in GB/T 6682) are adopted for the purpose of this method. 3.1 Reagents 3.1.1 Glacial acetic acid (CH3COOH). 3.1.2 Trichloromethane (CHCl3). 3.1.3 Potassium iodide (KI). 3.1.4 Sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3·5H2O). 3.1.5 Petroleum ether: with boiling range of 30℃~60℃. 3.1.6 Anhydrous sodium sulfate (Na2SO4). 3.1.7 Soluble starch. 3.1.8 Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7): the working chemical. 3.2 Reagents preparation 3.2.1 Trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution (volume ratio 40 + 60): measure 40mL of trichloromethane, add 60mL of glacial acetic acid and then mix uniformly. 3.2.2 Potassium iodide saturated solution: weigh 20g of potassium iodide, put in 10mL of cooled water which is newly boiled, shake up and store in the brown bottle which shall be kept in a dark place for standby. Ensure that saturated potassium iodide crystallization exists in the solution. Inspection prior to use: add 1.00 mL of potassium iodide saturated solution and two drops of 1% starch indicator into the mixed solution of trichloromethane and glacial acetic acid, if it turns blue which can only be eliminated with more than 1 drop of 0.01 mol/ L sodium thiosulfate solution, the potassium iodide solution can't be put into service and shall be prepared afresh. 3.2.3 1% starch indicator: weigh 0.5g of the soluble starch, add a small amount of water to make it into paste, pour into 100mL of boiling water while stirring, then boil and mix up and then cool it down for standby; prepare immediately before use. 3.2.4 Processing of petroleum ether: take 100mL of petroleum ether and put it into a distillation flask, then evaporate it to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. Wash the distillation flask with 30mL of trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution by several times and merge the washing solutions into a 250 mL iodine flask. Put in exact 1.00 mL of saturated potassium iodide solution, plug up the bottle cover, gently shake for 0.5 min and place it in the dark for 3min, after which add into 1.0 mL of the starch indicator and mix well. If it doesn't turn blue, the petroleum ether can be used for specimen preparation; and if blue appears after it is mixed well with 1.0 mL of the starch indicator, the reagent shall be replaced. 3.3 Preparation of standard solutions 3.3.1 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.1 mol/L): weigh 26g of sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3·5H2O), add into 0.2g of anhydrous sodium carbonate, dissolve them in 1,000mL of pure water, boil slowly for 10 min and cool it down. Place it for two weeks before filtration and calibration. 3.3.2 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.01mol/L): it shall be made by diluting the reagent prepared in 3.3.1 with cooled water which is newly boiled just before use. 3.3.3 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.002mol/L): it shall be made by diluting the reagent prepared in 3.3.1 with cooled water which is newly boiled just before use. 4 Instruments and Apparatuses 4.1 Iodine flask: 250 mL. 4.2 Burette: 10mL, with minimum scale of 0.05 mL. 4.3 Burette: 25mL or 50mL, with minimum scale of 0.1 mL. 4.4 Balance: with sensibility of 1 mg and 0.01mg. 4.5 Electrothermal constant-temperature dry oven 4.6 Rotary evaporator. Note: all the wares used for this method shall be free from reducing or oxidizing substances. Do not oil the surface of ground glass. 5 Analysis Steps 5.1 Specimen preparation Avoid strong light in sample preparation process and try the best to avoid taking into air. 5.1.1 Animal and vegetable fats and oils As for liquid samples, shake the closed vessel containing specimen sufficiently and uniformly and then sample directly, as for solid sample, select a representative specimen and put it into a closed vessel, then mix well and sample. 5.1.2 Fat and oil products 5.1.2.1 Edible hydrogenated oil, shortening and cocoa butter substitute As for liquid samples, shake the closed vessel containing specimen sufficiently and uniformly and then sample directly, as for solid sample, select a representative specimen and put it into a closed vessel, then mix well and sample. If necessary, put the closed vessel which contains solid specimen into the constant-temperature dry oven, heat slowly until it just melts, then shake and mix well, and then sample immediately for determination while the specimen is in liquid state. 5.1.2.2 Margarine Put the sample into a closed vessel, heat it in a constant-temperature dry oven at the temperature of 60℃ ~ 70℃ until it melts , shake and mix well, then continue heating it until emulsion breaking and layering, at which time filter the oil layer into a beaker through rapid qualitative filter paper. The filtrate in the beaker is the specimen to be tested which shall be clear. Take samples immediately for determination while the specimen to be tested is in liquid state. 5.1.3 Foods made of wheat flour, cereal, nuts and other vegetable foods through the processing techniques such as frying, puffing, baking, brewing and sauting Take the edible part of the representative sample drawn from all the samples, pestle in the glass mortar, and put the pestled sample into a wide mouth bottle, add in the petroleum ether (3.2.4) 2~3 times the volume of the sample, shake up and mix well, then leave it standstill and leaching for more than 12h. After that filter with a funnel containing anhydrous sodium sulfate, evaporate the petroleum ether to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. The residue is the specimen to be tested. 5.1.4 Foods made of animal foods through the processing techniques such as quick freezing, dry processing and salting away Take the edible part of the representative sample drawn from all the samples, grind it and mix well, then put it into a wide mouth bottle, add in the petroleum ether (3.2.4) 2~3 times the volume of the sample, shake up and mix well, then leave it standstill and leaching for more than 12h. After that filter with a funnel containing anhydrous sodium sulfate, evaporate the petroleum ether to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. The residue is the specimen to be tested. 5.2 Determination of the specimen Avoid determining the specimen in direct sunlight. Weigh 2g~3g (to the nearest of 0.001 g) of the specimen prepared in Clauses "5.1.1 ~ 5.1.4", place it into a 250 mL iodine flask, add in trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution, then gently shake to make the specimen fully dissolved. Put in exact 1.00 mL of saturated potassium iodide solution, plug up the bottle cover and gently shake for 0.5 min, then place it in the dark for 3min. Take it out and add into 100mL of water, shake well and titrate the iodine that is separated out with sodium thiosulfate standard solution (with 0.002 mol/L standard solution if the estimated peroxide value is 0.15 g/100g and below; with 0.01 mol/L standard solution if the estimated peroxide value is greater than 0.15g/100g) until it turns light yellow, then add in 1mL of starch indicator to continue titrating, and shake violently until the blue in the solution disappears. Carry out blank test at the same time. The volume of 0.01 mol/L sodium thiosulfate solution consumed for the blank test, V0 shall not exceed 0.1 mL.
Foreword i 1 Scope 2 Theory 3 Reagents and Materials 4 Instruments and Apparatuses 5 Analysis Steps 6 Expression of Analysis Results 7 Accuracy 8 Theory 9 Reagents and Materials 10 Instruments and Apparatuses 11 Analysis Steps 12 Expression of Analysis Results 13 Accuracy
Referred in GB 5009.227-2016:
*GB 5009.226-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of Hydrogen Peroxide Residual Quantity in Foods
*GB 5009.210-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of pantothenic acid in food
*GB 5009.179-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of trimethylamine in food
*GB 5009.169-2016 National Food Safety Standard Determination of Taurine in Foods
*GB 5009.157-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of organic acids in food
*GB 5009.141-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of lure red in food
*GB 5009.121-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of dehydroacetic acid in food
*GB 5009.248-2016 National Food Safety Standard Determination of Lutein in Foods
*GB 5009.247-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of neotame in food
*GB 5009.246-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of titania in food
*GB 5009.237-2016 National Food Safety Standard - Determination of pH value of food
GB 5009.227-2016 is referred in:
*GB/T 10464-2017 Sunflowerseed oil
*GB/T 1535-2017/XG1-2019 Soya bean oil, includes Amendment 1
*GB/T 10464-2017/XG1-2019 Sunflowerseed oil, inckudes Amendment 1
*GB/T 1536-2021 Rapeseed oil
*2015-1931 Law of the People's Republic of China on the Prevention and Control of Atmospheric Pollution 2015
*GB 13022-1991 Plastics-Determination of tensile properties of films
*GB/T 18380.1-2001 Tests on electric cables under fire conditions-Part 1:Test on a single vertical insulated wire or cable
*GB 5009.255-2016 National food safety standard-Dientermation of fructan in food
*GB/T 32918.4-2016 Elliptic Curve Public - Key Cryptography Algorithm Part 4: Public - Key Encryption Algorithm
*GB/T 32918.3-2016 Information security techniques - Elliptic Curve public - key cryptography - Part 3: Key exchange protocol
*GB/T 32918.2-2016 Elliptic Curve Public - Key Cryptography Part 2: Digital Signature Algorithm
*GB/T 32918.1-2016 Information security techniques - Elliptic Curve public - key cryptography - Part 1: General
*GB 5009.239-2016 National Food Safety Standard -Determination of Acidity in Foods
Code of China
Standard
GB 5009.227-2016  National Food Safety Standard - Determination of peroxide value in food (English Version)
Standard No.GB 5009.227-2016
Statussuperseded
LanguageEnglish
File FormatPDF
Word Count3500 words
Price(USD)70.0
Implemented on2017-3-1
Deliveryvia email in 1 business day
Detail of GB 5009.227-2016
Standard No.
GB 5009.227-2016
English Name
National Food Safety Standard - Determination of peroxide value in food
Chinese Name
食品安全国家标准 食品中过氧化值的测定
Chinese Classification
Professional Classification
GB
ICS Classification
Issued by
National Health and Family Planning Commission
Issued on
2016-08-31
Implemented on
2017-3-1
Status
superseded
Superseded by
GB 5009.227-2023 National food safety standard - Determination of peroxide value in foods
Superseded on
2024-9-6
Abolished on
Superseding
GB/T 5009.37-2003 Method for analysis of hygienic standard of edible oils
GB/T 5538-2005 Animal and vegetable fats and oils - Determination of peroxide value
SN/T 0801.3-2011 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils for Export. Determination of Peroxide Value
Language
English
File Format
PDF
Word Count
3500 words
Price(USD)
70.0
Keywords
GB 5009.227-2016, GB/T 5009.227-2016, GBT 5009.227-2016, GB5009.227-2016, GB 5009.227, GB5009.227, GB/T5009.227-2016, GB/T 5009.227, GB/T5009.227, GBT5009.227-2016, GBT 5009.227, GBT5009.227
Introduction of GB 5009.227-2016
Codeofchina.com is in charge of this English translation. In case of any doubt about the English translation, the Chinese original shall be considered as authoritative. This standard replaces GB/T5538-2005 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils - Determination of Peroxide Value, SN/T 0801.3-2011 Animal and Vegetable Fats and Oils for Export - Method for the Determination of Peroxide Value and Section 4.2 Peroxide value specified in GB/T5009.37-2003 Method for Analysis of Hygienic Standard of Edible Oils. Compared with Section 4.2 “Peroxide value” specified in GB/T5009.37- 2003, the main changes are as follows: ——The standard is renamed as “National Food Safety Standard - Determination of Peroxide Value in Foods”; ——The concentration of standard titration solution of sodium thiosulfate in Method I is modified; ——Method II "Colorimetry" is deleted and replaced by "Potentiometric Titration"; ——The scope of application of the methods is added; ——The section of "Sample preparation" is added. National Food Safety Standard - Determination of Peroxide Value in Foods 1 Scope This standard specifies two determination methods for peroxide value in foods: titration and potentiometric titration. Method I in this standard is applicable to edible animal and vegetable fats and oils, edible fat and oil products, foods made of wheat flour, cereal, nuts and other vegetable food through processing techniques such as frying, puffing, baking, brewing and sauting, as well as those made of animal food through the processing techniques such as quick freezing, dry processing and salting away; Method II is applicable to animal and vegetable fats and oils and margarine with the measurement range of 0 g/100g ~ 0.38 g/100g. This standard is not applicable to determination of embedded fat and oil products like vegetable fat powder. Method 1 Titration 2 Theory The oil and fat specimen prepared will be dissolved in trichloromethane and glacial acetic acid, during which the peroxide will react with potassium iodide to produce iodine that will be titrated by sodium thiosulfate standard solution. The amount of peroxide value shall be expressed by the mass fraction of the peroxide equivalent to iodine or the mill mole quantity of the active oxygen in 1 kg of the sample. 3 Reagents and Materials Unless otherwise specified, analytically-pure reagents and Class III water (defined in GB/T 6682) are adopted for the purpose of this method. 3.1 Reagents 3.1.1 Glacial acetic acid (CH3COOH). 3.1.2 Trichloromethane (CHCl3). 3.1.3 Potassium iodide (KI). 3.1.4 Sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3·5H2O). 3.1.5 Petroleum ether: with boiling range of 30℃~60℃. 3.1.6 Anhydrous sodium sulfate (Na2SO4). 3.1.7 Soluble starch. 3.1.8 Potassium dichromate (K2Cr2O7): the working chemical. 3.2 Reagents preparation 3.2.1 Trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution (volume ratio 40 + 60): measure 40mL of trichloromethane, add 60mL of glacial acetic acid and then mix uniformly. 3.2.2 Potassium iodide saturated solution: weigh 20g of potassium iodide, put in 10mL of cooled water which is newly boiled, shake up and store in the brown bottle which shall be kept in a dark place for standby. Ensure that saturated potassium iodide crystallization exists in the solution. Inspection prior to use: add 1.00 mL of potassium iodide saturated solution and two drops of 1% starch indicator into the mixed solution of trichloromethane and glacial acetic acid, if it turns blue which can only be eliminated with more than 1 drop of 0.01 mol/ L sodium thiosulfate solution, the potassium iodide solution can't be put into service and shall be prepared afresh. 3.2.3 1% starch indicator: weigh 0.5g of the soluble starch, add a small amount of water to make it into paste, pour into 100mL of boiling water while stirring, then boil and mix up and then cool it down for standby; prepare immediately before use. 3.2.4 Processing of petroleum ether: take 100mL of petroleum ether and put it into a distillation flask, then evaporate it to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. Wash the distillation flask with 30mL of trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution by several times and merge the washing solutions into a 250 mL iodine flask. Put in exact 1.00 mL of saturated potassium iodide solution, plug up the bottle cover, gently shake for 0.5 min and place it in the dark for 3min, after which add into 1.0 mL of the starch indicator and mix well. If it doesn't turn blue, the petroleum ether can be used for specimen preparation; and if blue appears after it is mixed well with 1.0 mL of the starch indicator, the reagent shall be replaced. 3.3 Preparation of standard solutions 3.3.1 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.1 mol/L): weigh 26g of sodium thiosulfate (Na2S2O3·5H2O), add into 0.2g of anhydrous sodium carbonate, dissolve them in 1,000mL of pure water, boil slowly for 10 min and cool it down. Place it for two weeks before filtration and calibration. 3.3.2 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.01mol/L): it shall be made by diluting the reagent prepared in 3.3.1 with cooled water which is newly boiled just before use. 3.3.3 Sodium thiosulfate standard solution (0.002mol/L): it shall be made by diluting the reagent prepared in 3.3.1 with cooled water which is newly boiled just before use. 4 Instruments and Apparatuses 4.1 Iodine flask: 250 mL. 4.2 Burette: 10mL, with minimum scale of 0.05 mL. 4.3 Burette: 25mL or 50mL, with minimum scale of 0.1 mL. 4.4 Balance: with sensibility of 1 mg and 0.01mg. 4.5 Electrothermal constant-temperature dry oven 4.6 Rotary evaporator. Note: all the wares used for this method shall be free from reducing or oxidizing substances. Do not oil the surface of ground glass. 5 Analysis Steps 5.1 Specimen preparation Avoid strong light in sample preparation process and try the best to avoid taking into air. 5.1.1 Animal and vegetable fats and oils As for liquid samples, shake the closed vessel containing specimen sufficiently and uniformly and then sample directly, as for solid sample, select a representative specimen and put it into a closed vessel, then mix well and sample. 5.1.2 Fat and oil products 5.1.2.1 Edible hydrogenated oil, shortening and cocoa butter substitute As for liquid samples, shake the closed vessel containing specimen sufficiently and uniformly and then sample directly, as for solid sample, select a representative specimen and put it into a closed vessel, then mix well and sample. If necessary, put the closed vessel which contains solid specimen into the constant-temperature dry oven, heat slowly until it just melts, then shake and mix well, and then sample immediately for determination while the specimen is in liquid state. 5.1.2.2 Margarine Put the sample into a closed vessel, heat it in a constant-temperature dry oven at the temperature of 60℃ ~ 70℃ until it melts , shake and mix well, then continue heating it until emulsion breaking and layering, at which time filter the oil layer into a beaker through rapid qualitative filter paper. The filtrate in the beaker is the specimen to be tested which shall be clear. Take samples immediately for determination while the specimen to be tested is in liquid state. 5.1.3 Foods made of wheat flour, cereal, nuts and other vegetable foods through the processing techniques such as frying, puffing, baking, brewing and sauting Take the edible part of the representative sample drawn from all the samples, pestle in the glass mortar, and put the pestled sample into a wide mouth bottle, add in the petroleum ether (3.2.4) 2~3 times the volume of the sample, shake up and mix well, then leave it standstill and leaching for more than 12h. After that filter with a funnel containing anhydrous sodium sulfate, evaporate the petroleum ether to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. The residue is the specimen to be tested. 5.1.4 Foods made of animal foods through the processing techniques such as quick freezing, dry processing and salting away Take the edible part of the representative sample drawn from all the samples, grind it and mix well, then put it into a wide mouth bottle, add in the petroleum ether (3.2.4) 2~3 times the volume of the sample, shake up and mix well, then leave it standstill and leaching for more than 12h. After that filter with a funnel containing anhydrous sodium sulfate, evaporate the petroleum ether to dryness with a rotary evaporator under reduced pressure in the water bath with the temperature below 40℃. The residue is the specimen to be tested. 5.2 Determination of the specimen Avoid determining the specimen in direct sunlight. Weigh 2g~3g (to the nearest of 0.001 g) of the specimen prepared in Clauses "5.1.1 ~ 5.1.4", place it into a 250 mL iodine flask, add in trichloromethane - glacial acetic acid mixed solution, then gently shake to make the specimen fully dissolved. Put in exact 1.00 mL of saturated potassium iodide solution, plug up the bottle cover and gently shake for 0.5 min, then place it in the dark for 3min. Take it out and add into 100mL of water, shake well and titrate the iodine that is separated out with sodium thiosulfate standard solution (with 0.002 mol/L standard solution if the estimated peroxide value is 0.15 g/100g and below; with 0.01 mol/L standard solution if the estimated peroxide value is greater than 0.15g/100g) until it turns light yellow, then add in 1mL of starch indicator to continue titrating, and shake violently until the blue in the solution disappears. Carry out blank test at the same time. The volume of 0.01 mol/L sodium thiosulfate solution consumed for the blank test, V0 shall not exceed 0.1 mL.
Contents of GB 5009.227-2016
Foreword i 1 Scope 2 Theory 3 Reagents and Materials 4 Instruments and Apparatuses 5 Analysis Steps 6 Expression of Analysis Results 7 Accuracy 8 Theory 9 Reagents and Materials 10 Instruments and Apparatuses 11 Analysis Steps 12 Expression of Analysis Results 13 Accuracy
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