Voltammetric behaviour of vitamins D2 and D3 at a glassy carbon electrode and their determination in pharmaceutical products by using liquid chromatography with amperometric detection

Abstract
Cyclic voltammetry was used to study the oxidation of vitamin D2(ergocalciferol) and vitamin D3(cholecalciferol) at a planar glassy carbon electrode. The electrode reaction for cholecalciferol was found to be dependent on the apparent pH between 4.95 and 6.10, and pH independent between pH 6.10 and 8.65 when the solutions contained 90% methanol; this suggested a pKa value of 6.10 for vitamin D3. Similar behaviour was exhibited by ergocalciferol, and a pKa value of 6.35 was found. The peak currents for both vitamins were found to be dependent on the methanol concentration of the supporting electrolyte. The peak currents were also found to be dependent on the ionic strength of the acetate buffer (pH 6.0) over the range 0.1–1.0 mol dm–3. Both substances were oxidized in one step, which was found to be an irreversible reaction; the final product for vitamin D2 can undergo absorption at the electrode surface. The parent compounds could be undergoing oxidation at the triene moieties. The optimum mobile phase for liquid chromatography with amperometric detection was found to be 95% methanol–0.05 mol dm–3 acetate buffer (pH 6.0); the detector was operated at a potential of + 1.3 V (versus Ag—AgCl), and a linear response was obtained for vitamin D3 over the range from 10 to 100 ng injected; for vitamin D2 the response was linear from 20 to 200 ng injected. Extracts of pharmaceutical products were separated on reversed-phase columns prior to amperometric detection of the vitamins. Cholecalciferol was successfully determined in a multivitamin table, and ergocalciferol in a multivitamin liquid preparation.