Abstract

Ascorbic acid is widely used in the food industry as a source of vitamin C or as antioxidant. However, it degrades quickly in beverages at acidic pH and can accelerate the degradation of anthocyanins, natural dyes used in beverages, leading to a loss of color. In this work, we investigated the possibility to replace ascorbic acid by ascorbic acid derivatives to prevent its degradation effect on anthocyanins from natural extracts (black carrot, grape juice, and purple sweet potato). For this, the thermal and photolytic stabilities under air and under N2 of ascorbic acid (as reference) and of some ascorbic acid derivatives (3-O-ethyl-l-ascorbic acid, 2-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-ascorbic acid, l-ascorbic acid 2-phosphate sesquimagnesium salt hydrate, l-ascorbyl 2,6-dibutyrate, glyceryl ascorbate, (+)-5,6-O-isopropylidene-l-ascorbic acid), soluble in aqueous model beverages, were studied alone and in the presence of anthocyanins from the natural extracts in citrate buffer at pH 3. The stability was followed by UV-visible spectrometry. To extend the investigation, some properties of the ascorbic acid derivatives (pKa, oxidation potential, bond dissociation energy, ionization potential) were also determined. Moreover, the addition of chlorogenic acid was examined to further stabilize the mixture of anthocyanins with 2-O-α-d-glucopyranosyl-l-ascorbic acid, a promising ascorbic acid derivative.

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