Calcium d-Saccharate: Aqueous Solubility, Complex Formation, and Stabilization of Supersaturation

J Agric Food Chem. 2016 Mar 23;64(11):2352-60. doi: 10.1021/acs.jafc.6b00166. Epub 2016 Mar 9.

Abstract

Molar conductivity of saturated aqueous solutions of calcium d-saccharate, used as a stabilizer of beverages fortified with calcium d-gluconate, increases strongly upon dilution, indicating complex formation between calcium and d-saccharate ions, for which, at 25 °C, Kassoc = 1032 ± 80, ΔHassoc° = −34 ± 6 kJ mol–1, and ΔSassoc° = −55 ± 9 J mol–1 K–1, were determined electrochemically. Calcium d-saccharate is sparingly soluble, with a solubility product, Ksp, of (6.17 ± 0.32) × 10–7 at 25 °C, only moderately increasing with the temperature: ΔHsol° = 48 ± 2 kJ mol–1, and ΔSassoc° = 42 ± 7 J mol–1 K–1. Equilibria in supersaturated solutions of calcium d-saccharate seem only to adjust slowly, as seen from calcium activity measurements in calcium d-saccharate solutions made supersaturated by cooling. Solutions formed by isothermal dissolution of calcium d-gluconate in aqueous potassium d-saccharate becomes spontaneously supersaturated with both d-gluconate and d-saccharate calcium salts, from which only calcium d-saccharate slowly precipitates. Calcium d-saccharate is suggested to act as a stabilizer of supersaturated solutions of other calcium hydroxycarboxylates with endothermic complex formation through a heat-induced shift in calcium complex distribution with slow equilibration upon cooling.

Keywords: calcium complexes; calcium d-gluconate; calcium d-saccharate; calcium salt solubility; spontaneous supersaturation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Beverages
  • Chemical Phenomena
  • Drug Stability
  • Electrochemistry
  • Glucaric Acid / chemistry*
  • Gluconates / chemistry
  • Solubility
  • Solutions / chemistry
  • Thermodynamics
  • Water*

Substances

  • Gluconates
  • Solutions
  • Water
  • Glucaric Acid
  • gluconic acid