Unraveling the impact of the capsule material on the aroma of brewed coffee by headspace analysis using a HiSorb probe followed by reverse fill/flush flow modulation GC×GC-MS.
Autor: | Eggermont D; Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, University of Liège, Bât. G1 Chimie des agro-biosystèmes, Passage des Déportés 2, 5030, Gembloux, Belgium., Spadafora ND; Department of Chemical, Pharmaceutical and Agricultural Sciences, University of Ferrara, 44121, Ferrara, Italy., Aspromonte J; Laboratorio de Investigación y Desarrollo de Métodos Analíticos, LIDMA, Facultad de Ciencias Exactas (Universidad Nacional de La Plata, CIC-PBA, CONICET), 1900, La Plata, Argentina., Purcaro G; Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, University of Liège, Bât. G1 Chimie des agro-biosystèmes, Passage des Déportés 2, 5030, Gembloux, Belgium. gpurcaro@uliege.be. |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Zdroj: | Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry [Anal Bioanal Chem] 2023 May; Vol. 415 (13), pp. 2511-2521. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Dec 08. |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00216-022-04457-x |
Abstrakt: | The present paper discusses the use of a high-concentration-capacity tool, HiSorb, to investigate the impact of capsule material on the aroma profile of espresso-brewed coffee. The specific high-concentration-capacity probe used is characterized by a sorbent volume (63 μL) intermediate between the solid-phase microextraction (SPME) fiber (0.6 μL) and the stir-bar sorptive extraction rod (126 μL). The extraction performance of the HiSorb was compared, in terms of both absolute signal and compound coverage, with both an equivalent sorbent (polydimethylsiloxane) and a divinylbenzene/carboxen/polydimethylsiloxane SPME fiber using both targeted and untargeted approaches. The HiSorb showed superior extraction compared with the SPME fibers. The HiSorb was then optimized in terms of extraction time and temperature and used to investigate the volatile profile of 23 espresso-brewed coffees prepared with capsules made of different materials-aluminum, compostable, and aluminum multilayer pack-prepared using a refillable capsule. Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography equipped with a reverse fill/flush flow modulator and coupled to mass spectrometry was used to obtain a chromatographic fingerprint of the volatile profile of the brewed coffee. The data were aligned and compared using a tile-based approach, and the results were obtained by performing raw data mining within the same software platform. The data mining enabled the extraction of informative features responsible for the differentiation between the different capsule materials, showing a significant depletion in aroma intensity in the compostable capsule. (© 2022. Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.) |
Databáze: | MEDLINE |
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