Determination of Caffeine in Moutain Dew

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The experiment aimed to determine the caffeine concentration in Mountain Dew by measuring the absorbance of diluted samples against standards. The initial calculations led to confusion regarding the amount of caffeine in a 2-liter bottle based on the diluted sample results. Clarification revealed that the concentration measured after dilution must be adjusted to reflect the original sample's caffeine content. Correct calculations involve multiplying the diluted concentration by the dilution factor, not dividing. This understanding allows for accurate comparison with the known caffeine content in Mountain Dew.
MitsuShai
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We did an experiment (link provided below), where we were to determine the concentration of caffeine in Mountain Dew. We made 3 standards and measured their absorbance along with the unknown (the mountain dew sample) and we graphed these results to find the concentration of caffeine in Mountain Dew. I wanted to compare this with the amount of caffeine in a 2 Liter Mountain Dew bottle (which was the sample used in the experiment).
I only had to take 4 mL of the same of soda, which was diluted to 100 mL with 10 mL of HCl, so I thought I just had to multiply the concentration that I got by 100 mL to get the mg of caffeine, but I didn't get 310 mg of caffeine (which is the amount of caffeine in Mountain Dew), instead I got a really small number. How do you calculate the mg of caffeine from the concentration (mg/L)?


http://www.mnstate.edu/marasing/CHEM380/Labs/380PLABL/Spectrophotometric%20Analysis%20of%20a%20Mixture%20%20Caffeine%20and%20Benzoic%20Acid.pdf
 
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Haven't you calculated amount of caffeine in 4 mL?
 
Borek said:
Haven't you calculated amount of caffeine in 4 mL?


So I can't compare it to the caffiene in a 2 Liter bottle, right?
 
If you know how much caffeine is on 4 mL, you can easily calculate how much is in 2 L.

From the information you posted it is not clear what you did and what you calculated. Procedure calls for measurement of concentration in diluted sample, so I guess the number you have is concentration AFTER dilution. This is not the same as in the original drink.
 
Hey, I did that experiment too a long time ago. Let me see if I can add something without getting into trouble:

Say you take 2ml of Dew and dilute it to 100ml and you run your sample against all the standards and you come out with a value that says in that 100 ml sample, you have 6 mg/l of caffeine. So wouldn't that mean in the original 2ml sample of Dew that would be 50 (6)=300 mg/l since you diluted 2/100?
 
jackmell said:
Hey, I did that experiment too a long time ago. Let me see if I can add something without getting into trouble:

Say you take 2ml of Dew and dilute it to 100ml and you run your sample against all the standards and you come out with a value that says in that 100 ml sample, you have 6 mg/l of caffeine. So wouldn't that mean in the original 2ml sample of Dew that would be 50 (6)=300 mg/l since you diluted 2/100?


Oh duh that's how you do it, I was thinking of multiplying the sample by (2/100) instead of (100/2).
Thank you so much.
 
Unit analysis tells you what to do... multiply or divide.
 
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