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Dive into the research topics where Barbara J. Porter is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara J. Porter.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2008

Certification of standard reference materials containing bitter orange

Lane C. Sander; Karsten Putzbach; Bryant C. Nelson; Catherine A. Rimmer; Mary Bedner; J. Brown Thomas; Barbara J. Porter; Laura J. Wood; Michele M. Schantz; Karen E. Murphy; Katherine E. Sharpless; Stephen A. Wise; James H. Yen; P. H. Siitonen; R. L. Evans; A. Nguyen Pho; Mark Roman; Joseph M. Betz

A suite of three dietary supplement standard reference materials (SRMs) containing bitter orange has been developed, and the levels of five alkaloids and caffeine have been measured by multiple analytical methods. Synephrine, octopamine, tyramine, N-methyltyramine, hordenine, total alkaloids, and caffeine were determined by as many as six analytical methods, with measurements performed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology and at two collaborating laboratories. The methods offer substantial independence, with two types of extractions, two separation methods, and four detection methods. Excellent agreement was obtained among the measurements, with data reproducibility for most methods and analytes better than 5% relative standard deviation. The bitter-orange-containing dietary supplement SRMs are intended primarily for use as measurement controls and for use in the development and validation of analytical methods.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2008

Development of saw palmetto (Serenoa repens) fruit and extract standard reference materials

Michele M. Schantz; Mary Bedner; Stephen E. Long; John L. Molloy; Karen E. Murphy; Barbara J. Porter; Karsten Putzbach; Catherine A. Rimmer; Lane C. Sander; Katherine E. Sharpless; Jeanice M. Brown Thomas; Stephen A. Wise; Laura J. Wood; James H. Yen; Takashi Yarita; Agnes Nguyenpho; Wendy R. Sorenson; Joseph M. Betz

As part of a collaboration with the National Institutes of Health’s Office of Dietary Supplements and the Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, the National Institute of Standards and Technology has developed two standard reference materials (SRMs) representing different forms of saw palmetto (Serenoa repens), SRM 3250 Serenoa repens fruit and SRM 3251 Serenoa repens extract. Both of these SRMs have been characterized for their fatty acid and phytosterol content. The fatty acid concentration values are based on results from gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC-FID) and mass spectrometry (GC/MS) analysis while the sterol concentration values are based on results from GC-FID and liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry analysis. In addition, SRM 3250 has been characterized for lead content, and SRM 3251 has been characterized for the content of β-carotene and tocopherols. SRM 3250 (fruit) has certified concentration values for three phytosterols, 14 fatty acids as triglycerides, and lead along with reference concentration values for four fatty acids as triglycerides and 16 free fatty acids. SRM 3251 (extract) has certified concentration values for three phytosterols, 17 fatty acids as triglycerides, β-carotene, and γ-tocopherol along with reference concentration values for three fatty acids as triglycerides, 17 fatty acids as free fatty acids, β-carotene isomers, and δ-tocopherol and information values for two phytosterols. These SRMs will complement other reference materials currently available with concentrations for similar analytes and are part of a series of SRMs being developed for dietary supplements.


Chemosphere | 1996

Interlaboratory comparison study for PCB congeners and chlorinated pesticides in beluga whale blubber

Michele M. Schantz; Barbara J. Porter; Stephen A. Wise; Mark Segstro; Derek C.G. Muir; Stephanie Mössner; Karlheinz Ballschmiter; Paul R. Becker

Three laboratories participated in an interlaboratory comparison exercise for the determination of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners and chlorinated pesticides in Standard Reference Material (SRM) 1588 (Organics in Cod Liver Oil) a whale blubber control material, and six beluga whale (Delphinapterus leucas) blubber samples. The results are generally in good agreement. The minor disagreement of some of the results may be attributed to differences in detector calibrations, differences in chromatographic separation selectivity for specific compounds, or both. The SRM and control material help to validate the analytical procedures and to verify that these procedures remain in control.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2012

Development and certification of green tea-containing standard reference materials.

Lane C. Sander; Mary Bedner; M. C. Tims; James H. Yen; David L. Duewer; Barbara J. Porter; Steven J. Christopher; Russell D. Day; Stephen E. Long; John L. Molloy; Karen E. Murphy; Brian E. Lang; R. Lieberman; Laura J. Wood; M. J. Payne; Mark Roman; Joseph M. Betz; A. NguyenPho; Katherine E. Sharpless; Stephen A. Wise

AbstractA suite of three green tea-containing Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) has been issued by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST): SRM 3254 Camellia sinensis (Green Tea) Leaves, SRM 3255 Camellia sinensis (Green Tea) Extract, and SRM 3256 Green Tea-Containing Solid Oral Dosage Form. The materials are characterized for catechins, xanthine alkaloids, theanine, and toxic elements. As many as five methods were used in assigning certified and reference values to the constituents, with measurements carried out at NIST and at collaborating laboratories. The materials are intended for use in the development and validation of new analytical methods, and for use as control materials as a component in the support of claims of metrological traceability. FigureGreen Tea - Camellia sinensis


Journal of Environmental Monitoring | 2006

Persistent organic pollutants in Alaskan ringed seal (Phoca hispida) and walrus (Odobenus rosmarus) blubber.

John R. Kucklick; Margaret M. Krahn; Paul R. Becker; Barbara J. Porter; Michele M. Schantz; Geoffrey S. York; Todd M. O’Hara; Stephen A. Wise

Since 1987, the Alaska Marine Mammal Tissue Archival Project (AMMTAP) has collected tissues from 18 marine mammal species. Specimens are archived in the National Institute of Standards and Technologys National Biomonitoring Specimen Bank (NIST-NBSB). AMMTAP has collected blubber, liver and/or kidney specimens from a number of ringed seals (Phoca hispida) from the areas near Nome and Barrow, Alaska and walruses (Odobenus rosmarus) from several locations in the Bering Sea. Thirty-three ringed seal and 15 walrus blubber samples from the NIST-NBSB were analyzed for persistent organic pollutants (POPs). The compounds determined included PCBs (28 congeners or congener groups), DDT and related compounds, hexachlorobenzene (HCB), hexachlorocyclohexane isomers (HCHs), chlordanes, dieldrin, and mirex. POP concentrations in ringed seal blubber were significantly higher in Barrow than in Nome when statistically accounting for the interaction of age and gender; HCB, however, was not statistically different between the two locations. Unlike males, POP concentrations and age were not significantly correlated in females probably as a result of lactational loss. POP concentrations in walrus blubber were lower than in ringed seal blubber for SigmaPCBs, chlordanes, and HCHs, but higher for dieldrin and mirex. POP concentrations in ringed seals and walrus from Alaska provide further evidence that the western Arctic tends to have lower or similar POP concentrations compared to the eastern Canadian Arctic.


Polycyclic Aromatic Compounds | 2001

Recent Developments in NIST Standard Reference Materials for Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons in Environmental Matrices

Stephen A. Wise; Bruce A. Benner; Maria J. Lopez de Alda; Barbara J. Porter; Dianne L. Poster; Lane C. Sander; Michele M. Schantz

Abstract The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has recently issued several new environmental matrix SRMs, including air and diesel particulate matter, marine sediment, and mussel tissue with certified and reference concentrations for polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs). New marine-related SRMs include: SRM 1944 New York/New Jersey Waterway Sediment, SRM 2974 Organics in Freeze-dried Mussel Tissue, SRM 2977 Mussel Tissue (Organic Contaminants and Trace Elements), and SRM 2978 Mussel Tissue (Organic Contaminants — Raritan Bay, New Jersey). SRM 2975 Diesel Particulate Matter (Industrial Forklift) and SRM 1975 Diesel Particulate Extract (a dichloromethane extract of the particulate matter used for SRM 2975) represent two new diesel particulate-related materials. In addition two existing materials, SRM 1649a Urban Dust and SRM 1650a Diesel Particulate Matter were recently reissued with certified and reference values for over 40 PAHs.


Analytical Chemistry | 2011

Certification of vitamins and carotenoids in SRM 3280 multivitamin/multielement tablets.

Lane C. Sander; Katherine E. Sharpless; Stephen A. Wise; Bryant C. Nelson; Karen W. Phinney; Barbara J. Porter; Catherine A. Rimmer; Jeanice M. Brown Thomas; Laura J. Wood; James H. Yen; David L. Duewer; R. Atkinson; P. Chen; R J. Goldschmidt; W. R. Wolf; I.-P. Ho; Joseph M. Betz

A new multivitamin/multielement dietary supplement Standard Reference Material (SRM) has been issued by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), with certified and reference concentration values for 13 vitamins, 24 elements, and 2 carotenoids. The constituents have been measured by multiple analytical methods with data contributed by NIST and by collaborating laboratories. This effort included the first use of isotope dilution mass spectrometry for value assignment of both fat-soluble vitamins (FSVs) and water-soluble vitamins (WSVs). Excellent agreement was obtained among the methods, with relative expanded uncertainties for the certified concentration values typically ranging from <2% to 15% for vitamins.


Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry | 2010

Marine mammal blubber reference and control materials for use in the determination of halogenated organic compounds and fatty acids

John R. Kucklick; Michele M. Schantz; Rebecca S. Pugh; Barbara J. Porter; Dianne L. Poster; Paul R. Becker; Teri Rowles; Stefan D. Leigh; Stephen A. Wise

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has a diverse collection of control materials derived from marine mammal blubber, fat, and serum. Standard Reference Material (SRM) 1945 Organics in Whale Blubber was recertified for polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) congeners, organochlorine pesticides, and polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) congeners. SRM 1945 has also been assigned mass fraction values for compounds not frequently determined in marine samples including toxaphene congeners, coplanar PCBs, and methoxylated PBDE congeners which are natural products. NIST also has assigned mass fraction values, as a result of interlaboratory comparison exercises, for PCB congeners, organochlorine pesticides, PBDE congeners, and fatty acids in six homogenate materials produced from marine mammal blubber or serum. The materials are available from NIST upon request; however, the supply is very limited for some of the materials. The materials include those obtained from pilot whale blubber (Homogenates III and IV), Blainville’s beaked whale blubber (Homogenate VII), polar bear fat (Homogenate VI), and California sea lion serum (Marine Mammal Control Material-1 Serum) and blubber (Homogenate V).


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011

Characterization of three berry standard reference materials for nutrients.

Laura J. Wood; Katherine E. Sharpless; Monique Pichon; Barbara J. Porter; James H. Yen; Stefan Ehling

The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has been working with the National Institutes of Health Office of Dietary Supplements to produce Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) of interest to analysts of dietary supplements. Some of these SRMs are traditional foods including SRM 3281 Cranberry (Fruit), SRM 3282 Low-Calorie Cranberry Juice Cocktail, and SRM 3287 Blueberry (Fruit), which have been characterized for nine nutritional elements and sugars. The blueberries have also been characterized for proximates, two water-soluble vitamins, and amino acids. These new materials are intended for use in method development and validation as well as for quality assurance and traceability in the assignment of values to in-house control materials. Foods can be difficult to analyze because of matrix effects. With the addition of these three new SRMs, it is now possible to more closely match controls to matrices and analyte levels for fruit and vegetable test samples. Several nutritional elements in these three SRMs are present at lower levels than in other food-matrix SRMs.


Environmental Forensics | 2007

New Developments in Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) for Environmental Forensics

Dianne L. Poster; John R. Kucklick; Michele M. Schantz; Barbara J. Porter; Lane C. Sander; Stephen A. Wise

For nearly three decades the National Institute of Standards and Technology (Gaithersburg, MD) has been involved in the development of Standard Reference Materials (SRMs) for the determination of organic contaminants in environmental matrices. Classes of organic contaminants characterized in these materials include polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), chlorinated pesticides, and most recently, brominated flame retardants (polybrominated diphenyl ethers [PBDEs]). Environmental matrices include fossil fuels, air and diesel particulate matter, house dust, coal tar, sediment, mussel and fish tissue, fish oil, and whale blubber. Recent SRM developments and activities have led to a number of environmental SRMs that are useful for assuring quality of analytical measurements in environmental forensics where source profiling of organic contaminants is often conducted in a range of environmental or biological matrices. Particle-related SRM developments include the issue of a new house dust material (SRM 2585 Organic Contaminants in House Dust), and the recertification of two SRMs: a diesel particulate matter material (SRM 1650b Diesel Particulate Matter) for certified and reference values for 97 PAHs and nitro-PAHs and a river sediment (SRM 1939b PCBs in River Sediment A) for a greater number of PCB congener concentrations relative to its former certification in 1998 as well as for total PCBs. A coal tar SRM (SRM 1597a Complex Mixture of PAHs from Coal Tar) has also been reissued with an expanded range of values for PAHs (including methyl- and dimethyl-substituted PAHs, PAH isomers of molecular mass 302, and polycyclic aromatic sulfur heterocycles [PASH]). The latest biological SRM developments include the issue of a new fish tissue SRM (SRM 1947 Lake Michigan Fish Tissue) and the recertification of a cod liver oil (SRM 1588b Organics in Cod Liver Oil) and a human serum (SRM 1589b PCBs, Pesticides, PBDEs, and Dioxins/Furans in Human Serum). SRM 1588b has values assigned for 124 constituents, and SRM 1589b has values assigned for 88 constituents. An overview of these recent SRM activities is provided in this paper, and selected organic contaminant values in newly developed particulate-related and biological SRMs are presented. The usefulness of these materials for assuring quality in environmental forensic measurements is also discussed.

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Stephen A. Wise

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Michele M. Schantz

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Paul R. Becker

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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John R. Kucklick

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Elizabeth A. Mackey

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Rebecca S. Pugh

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Lane C. Sander

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Katherine E. Sharpless

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Steven J. Christopher

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Michael B. Ellisor

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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