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Analysis of wine primary aroma compounds by stir bar sorptive extraction.
Talanta. 2007 Mar 15; 71(4):1610-5.T

Abstract

Due to the great importance of some primary aroma compounds on wine quality, these compounds which includes terpenes, C(13)-norisoprenoids and C(6) compounds, have been analyzed by stir bar sorptive extraction (SBSE) followed by a thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. The stir bar sorptive extraction method was optimized in terms of temperature, time, pH and NaCl addition. The best SBSE sorption kinetics for the target analytes were obtained after submitting the solutions to 60 degrees C during 90min. The addition of sodium chloride did not enhance the volatile extraction. The method proposed showed good linearity over the concentration range tested, with correlation coefficients higher than 0.98 for all the analytes. The reproducibility and repeatability of the method was estimated between 0.22 and 9.11%. The detection and quantification limits of all analytes were lower than their respective olfactory threshold values. The application of this SBSE method revealed that monovarietal white wines were clearly separated by two canonic discriminating functions when grape varieties were used as differentiating variable, the first of which explained 98.4% of the variance. The compounds which contributed most to the differentiation were limonene, linalool, nerolidol and 1-hexanol.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Cátedra de Química Agrícola, E.T.S.I. Agrónomos, Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha, Campus Universitario, E-02071 Albacete, Spain.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

19071498

Citation

Zalacain, A, et al. "Analysis of Wine Primary Aroma Compounds By Stir Bar Sorptive Extraction." Talanta, vol. 71, no. 4, 2007, pp. 1610-5.
Zalacain A, Marín J, Alonso GL, et al. Analysis of wine primary aroma compounds by stir bar sorptive extraction. Talanta. 2007;71(4):1610-5.
Zalacain, A., Marín, J., Alonso, G. L., & Salinas, M. R. (2007). Analysis of wine primary aroma compounds by stir bar sorptive extraction. Talanta, 71(4), 1610-5. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.talanta.2006.07.051
Zalacain A, et al. Analysis of Wine Primary Aroma Compounds By Stir Bar Sorptive Extraction. Talanta. 2007 Mar 15;71(4):1610-5. PubMed PMID: 19071498.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Analysis of wine primary aroma compounds by stir bar sorptive extraction. AU - Zalacain,A, AU - Marín,J, AU - Alonso,G L, AU - Salinas,M R, Y1 - 2006/09/08/ PY - 2006/03/28/received PY - 2006/07/19/revised PY - 2006/07/24/accepted PY - 2008/12/17/entrez PY - 2007/3/15/pubmed PY - 2007/3/15/medline SP - 1610 EP - 5 JF - Talanta JO - Talanta VL - 71 IS - 4 N2 - Due to the great importance of some primary aroma compounds on wine quality, these compounds which includes terpenes, C(13)-norisoprenoids and C(6) compounds, have been analyzed by stir bar sorptive extraction (SBSE) followed by a thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. The stir bar sorptive extraction method was optimized in terms of temperature, time, pH and NaCl addition. The best SBSE sorption kinetics for the target analytes were obtained after submitting the solutions to 60 degrees C during 90min. The addition of sodium chloride did not enhance the volatile extraction. The method proposed showed good linearity over the concentration range tested, with correlation coefficients higher than 0.98 for all the analytes. The reproducibility and repeatability of the method was estimated between 0.22 and 9.11%. The detection and quantification limits of all analytes were lower than their respective olfactory threshold values. The application of this SBSE method revealed that monovarietal white wines were clearly separated by two canonic discriminating functions when grape varieties were used as differentiating variable, the first of which explained 98.4% of the variance. The compounds which contributed most to the differentiation were limonene, linalool, nerolidol and 1-hexanol. SN - 1873-3573 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/19071498/Analysis_of_wine_primary_aroma_compounds_by_stir_bar_sorptive_extraction_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0039-9140(06)00535-2 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -
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