Acetaminophen Project
This project's goal was to quantify the concentration of Acetaminophen left after a reaction with hydrogen peroxide, Acetaminophen, & horseradish peroxidase. To do this, I made standards with known concentrations of Acetaminophen. Then, we ran the reaction in three separate vials with varying amounts of peroxide with the constant amounts of Acetaminophen and horseradish peroxidase (HRP).
My research partner, Josie Welker, ran a similar experiment with HPA, the link to his page can be found here.
Acetaminophen Standards
In order for our samples to be tested, a 2 mM Acetaminophen pH 5 solution, Hydrogen peroxide stock solution, and horseradish peroxidase solution were made.
2 mM Acetaminophen Buffer Stock Solution
Put the 2 mM Acetaminophen standard into a jar, and add the pH 5 buffer tablet. Stir until dissolved.
Hydrogen Peroxide Stock Solution
Add 5 mL of water into a scintillation vial. Add 283 uL of 30% Hydrogen Peroxide to the water. The solution is now at about 0.413 M.
Horseradish Peroxidase Solution
Preparing The Final samples
Measure out 5 mL of Acetaminophen into four different scintillation vials. Add differing amounts of Hydrogen peroxide solution into each of the vials (3uL, 6uL, 12uL, & 24uL). Add 10uL horseradish peroxidase solution to each of the vials.
Instrumentation
After preparing our solutions, we tested them on the HPLC to see where the peaks were at different concentrations of hydrogen peroxide.
The following link provides insight into how the HPLC works and how a user can correctly use the instrument.