On Monday, December 19, 2022 at 7:56:22 AM UTC-7, Martin Brown wrote:
On 18/12/2022 01:00, RichD wrote:
How do they measure the calorie content of food items?
Bomb calorimetry. Burn it in oxygen at constant volume which makes the reaction go very fast.
A bomb calorimeter uses a high pressure of oxygen, not to make the reaction go fast, but to make sure the sample burns completely. This is extremely important because you can't calculate the heat of reaction very accurately otherwise. For analytes that
don't burn well, top-notch calorimetry labs will collect the ash and subject it to further analysis so that they can correct for the presence of poorly (or non-)combustible material in the sample. For example, there is a necessary correction for samples
that are high in calcium carbonate because the heat causes the carbonate to decompose into carbon dioxide and calcium oxide, which is an endothermic process. This process is clearly not relevant to someone eating a high-calcium food, so it has to be
corrected for. (Along with obvious high-calcium foods like dairy products, this will be an issue for mechanically separated meat, which contains a lot of tiny bits of bone. Enjoy your cheap hot dogs and chicken nuggets.) Ash from such samples would
therefore be analyzed for calcium content so that the appropriate correction could be made to the measured heat. Having said that, I'm not sure how many food labs would be that careful.
Marc Roussel
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