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Anion-Exchange Method for Determination of Phytate in Foods: Collaborative Study
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1986
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NutritionEngineeringBotanyFood AnalysisAgricultural EconomicsFood ChemistryAgricultural ChemistryPlant SeedsBioanalysisBlind Duplicate SamplesAnalytical ChemistryPlant NutritionPhytochemicalChromatographyPhytotoxicityIsolated Soybean ProteinAnion-exchange MethodPhytochemistryMedicine
Phytate, a naturally occurring organic compound found in plant seeds, roots, and tubers, was determined in a collaborative study using a modified anion-exchange method. Seven samples (peanut flour, oats, rice, isolated soybean protein, a vegetarian diet composite, wheat bran, and whole wheat bread), supplied as blind duplicate samples, were analyzed in triplicate by 7 collaborators. Phytate concentrations in the samples ranged from 2.38 to 46.70 mg/g. Relative standard deviations (RSD = CV) for repeatability ranged from 2.5 to 10.1%, and for reproducibility, from 4.5 to 11.0%. The method has been adopted official first action.