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4 protocols using aas standards

1

Quantitative Amino Acid Analysis of RAs

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Amino acids were quantified by HPLC after an acidic hydrolysis according to Dhillon, Kumar, and Gujar [66 (link)] and using an AccQ-Tag reagent kit from Waters (Milford, MA, USA) for derivatization of amino acids.
Each RAs sample (ca. 30 mg) was hydrolyzed with 4 mL of HCl and 15 μL of phenol at 110 °C for 24 h, and then entrapped in N2 atmosphere. The hydrolyzate was filtered through syringe filters (0.45 μm), and then dried with N2. Next, 10 μL of the sample was mixed with 70 μL of borate buffer (pH 8.2–9.0), then 20 μL of 6-aminoquinolyl-N-hydroxysuccinimidylcarbamate acetonitrile solution (3 mg/mL) were added to the mixture (AccQ-Tag reagent kit, Waters, Milford, USA). Analogous procedures were used in the case of standards.
The amino acid profile (AAs) was identified on a Dionex Ultimate 3000 HPLC instrument (Thermo Scientific, Germering, Germany). Separation was provided on a reverse-phase Nova-Pak C18 column (4 μm, 150 × 3.9 mm) (Waters, Milford, MA, USA) at 37 °C. Elution was run in a two-component gradient at 1 mL/min; eluent A: acetic-phosphate buffer, eluent B: acetonitrile-water (60:40). The detector (VWD-3400RS) was set at 240 nm wavelength. The AAs peaks were computed from AAs standards (Sigma-Aldrich, Poznan, Poland) run at five concentrations. Individual AA values were expressed as mg/100 g of fresh weight of RAs.
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2

Trace Metal Separation and Quantification

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Aqueous solutions containing 100 μg of copper, nickel and zinc (1000 mg/L AAS Standards, Sigma Aldrich, USA) were added to 100 mL 1.25 M ammonium acetate solution at pH 5 and passed through the chelation disk as described above. 10 mL of 6 M hydrochloric acid (trace metals grade) was then added to remove the nickel, copper, and zinc that were bound to the chelation disk. This solution was then passed through an anion-exchange column using 2.5 g AG1-8X resin (Bio-Rad, USA) and washed with an additional 10 mL of 6 M HCl to remove the nickel followed by 10 mL of 0.5 M HCl to remove the copper. Each 10 mL fraction was brought to dryness by evaporation through overnight heating at 80°C and reconstituted in 1 mL Ultratrace water (Sigma Aldrich, USA) and analyzed by an HPLC trace metal ion chromatography method24 (link).
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3

Analytical Chemistry Reagent Procurement

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Citric acid anhydrous (99.7%), Sulfuric acid (97%), Nitric acid (70%), Acetone (99.8%), AAS standards, Sucrose, Sodium nitrate (99.8%), Magnesium sulfateheptahydrate (99.8%), Potassium chloride (99%), Potassium dihydrogen phosphate (99.5%) were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich, Bangalore (India).
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4

Zeolite-Based Catalyst Iron Content Analysis

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The iron metal content in prepared zeolite-based catalyst samples was determined by atomic absorption spectrometry using a Thermo Scientific ICE3000 series AAS spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA, USA). A hollow cathode lamp was used as a radiation source. The external standard method was applied for the determination of metal content (AAS standards, Sigma Aldrich). Signals were processed with Solaar software ver. 2.01 provided by the producer.
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