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HPLC×Titulación Karl Fischer×Extracción con Fluidos Supercríticos×
CampoCiencia de los alimentosCiencia de los alimentosCiencia de los alimentos
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen197019351960s–1980s (industrial development; Zosel's foundational patents ~1964–1978)
Autor originalCsaba HorváthKarl FischerMultiple contributors (Kurt Zosel, Gerd Brunner, and others from the 1960s–1980s)
TipoSeparation and Quantification TechniqueTitrimetric Water DeterminationPhysical separation and extraction technique
Fuente seminalSnyder, L. R., Kirkland, J. J., & Dolan, J. W. (2010). Introduction to modern liquid chromatography (3rd ed.). Wiley. DOI ↗Karl Fischer. Neue Methode zur Maßstabbestimmung des Wassers in Flüssigkeiten und Gasen. Angewandte Chemie, 48(44), 394-396. (1935) link ↗Brunner, G. (2005). Supercritical fluids: technology and application to food processing. Journal of Food Engineering, 67(1–2), 21–33. DOI ↗
AliasHPLC, high-pressure liquid chromatographyKFTSFE, supercritical CO2 extraction, supercritical carbon dioxide extraction, dense gas extraction
Relacionados330
ResumenHigh-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) is an analytical technique that separates, identifies, and quantifies components in a complex food sample by passing the sample through a pressurized column packed with a stationary phase. Developed by Horváth in the early 1970s, HPLC enables rapid, sensitive measurement of nutrients, contaminants, additives, and bioactive compounds in food products with high precision and accuracy.Karl Fischer Titration (KFT) is a precise analytical method for determining water content in food and pharmaceutical products. Developed by Karl Fischer in 1935, KFT uses a chemical reaction between water and an iodine-based titrant, allowing quantification of moisture with exceptional accuracy and sensitivity. KFT is the official gold-standard method for water determination in numerous food and pharmaceutical standards worldwide.Supercritical Fluid Extraction (SFE) is a separation technique that uses a fluid held above its critical temperature and pressure — most commonly carbon dioxide — to selectively dissolve and remove target compounds from a solid or liquid matrix. Widely applied in food science, nutraceutical production, and the flavour and fragrance industry, SFE offers a solvent-efficient, thermally gentle route to recovering oils, antioxidants, pigments, and bioactive compounds without the toxic residues associated with conventional organic solvents.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: HPLC · Karl Fischer Titration · Supercritical Fluid Extraction. Recuperado el 2026-06-20 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare