Hello there
I am doing a practical chemistry investigation in which I have heated samples of orange juice at different temperatures (at 40°C intervals, starting at 40°C and ending at 240°C). I obtained a decreasing trend in vitamin C concentration as the temperature heated at increased. What I am looking for now is an explicit explanation as to why this occured; I have looked at and read many scholarly articles on people doing the same experiment (albeit with much better equipment that I used), but they only talk about the trend, and I can't see anywhere, in the report or in the cited articles, about the actual degredation of vitamin C as it is heated, or why it is so heat sensitive.
So I ask, what is it that happens to vitamin C when it is heated that makes its concentration in solution decrease? I know that it oxidises to dehydroascorbic acid, but does the heating of the vitamin C relate to this? Does something happen to the bonds in the molecule that causes it to degrade somehow? I think I should add that I determined the vitamin C of the heated samples by titrating the samples with potassium iodate in the burette, and also in the presence of iodide, 1M hydrochloric acid and starch indicator (the iodate reacted with the iodide to produce iodine, which reacted with the vitamin C, and once all the vitamin C went, the iodine was free to react with the starch indicator, indicating the endpoint). I used commercial orange juice.
Also, could I possibly be linked to some scholarly article or other reliable document that states why the vitamin C degrades, for the purposes of the report?
Thanks so much!
microberry1