Detection of sucralose (also known under its trade name Splenda®), particularly in food and beverages, is slow and involves the use of complex instrumentation. Current techniques involve high pressure liquid chromatography and/or mass spectrometry. Use of these techniques is not commercially viable. Producers want rapid and accurate responses - resulting in some producers determining sucralose concentration by taste alone.
An interdisciplinary collaboration of UC Santa Cruz researchers has developed an electrode based test that can accurately provide sucralose concentrations in a sample solution in under 5 seconds. The key to this breakthrough is a screen printed electrode made up of a metal oxide and a metal (such as a dielectric metal) that can perform high efficiency electrooxidiation of sucralose. The team has tested two electrodes to date: one a copper oxide electrode and the other a platinum wire electrode which are capable of linear detection of sucralose up to 25 nM and 75 nM respectively.
The electrode is designed to be used in conjunction with a hand-held device that displays the sucralose concentration numerically.
The system can be adapted for the detection of other carbohydrates as well as sucralose.
Applications include:
No other rapid tests for measuring sucralose are available.
Simple, inexpensive instrumentation
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