| Literature DB >> 26495155 |
Giuseppina Negri1, Julino Assunção Rodrigues Soares Neto2, Elisaldo Luiz de Araujo Carlini1.
Abstract
Our study analyzed 152 samples of alcoholic beverages coll<span class="Chemical">ected from the states of São Paulo and Minas Gerais, Brazil, using gas chromatography with flame ionization detection (GC-FID) and mass spectrometry (GC-MS), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), and inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES). The methanol content varied from 20 to 180 ppm in 28 samples, and the limit of the accepted level of 200 ppm was exceeded in only one sample. High content of cyanide derivatives and ethyl carbamate, above the accepted level of 150 ppb, was observed in 109 samples. Carbonyl compounds were also observed in 111 samples, showing hydroxy 2-propanone, 4-methyl-4-hepten-3-one, furfural, and 2-hydroxyethylcarbamate as main constituents. Copper was found at concentrations above 5 ppm in 26 samples; the maximum value observed was 28 ppm. This work evaluated the human health risk associated with the poor quality of suspected unrecorded alcohols beverages.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26495155 PMCID: PMC4606088 DOI: 10.1155/2015/230170
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anal Methods Chem ISSN: 2090-8873 Impact factor: 2.193
Figure 1IR spectrum of a sample of Brazilian cachaça showing the main bands: at 3341–2906 cm−1 attributed to O–H stretching of alcohols, water, carboxylic acids, and amides; at 2145 cm−1 attributed to the asymmetric vibration of NCO− in cyanate-copper complexes; at 1659–1651 cm−1 attributed to CO stretching vibrations conjugated with double bonds (C=C) adjacent to a carbonyl group; at 1086 and 1046 cm−1 attributed to stretching vibrations of hydrogen-bonded C–OH alcoholic groups.
Number of samples among the 152 samples of alcoholic beverages collected from the states of São Paulo (number of samples 65) and Minas Gerais (number of samples 87), Brazil, which are unlabeled and did not display a MAPA registration number or tax seal.
| Items considered | Samples from São Paulo ( | Samples from Minas Gerais ( |
|---|---|---|
| Missing label | 44 | 49 |
| MAPA registration number | 12 | 1 |
| Tax seal | 0 | 24 |
| Inadequate packaging | 2 | 1 |
| Low price | 7 | 12 |
Results obtained in chemical analyses carried out in 65 samples of alcoholic beverages from state of São Paulo* and 87 from state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Methanol content (limit 200 ppm), ethanol content in percentage by volume (38% to 48%), and copper (limit 5 ppm).
| States | Number of samples | Methanol (ppm) | Ethanol (%) | Copper (ppm) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| <20 | 20 to 180 | >240 | >38 | 20% to 38% | 5% to 20% | <5 | 5 to 28 | ||
| São Paulo | 65* | 49 | 4 | 1 | 32 | 11 | 22 | 54 | 11 |
| Minas Gerais | 87 | 63 | 24 | 0 | 36 | 13 | 38 | 72 | 15 |
*For analyses of methanol content in samples from São Paulo State, among the 65 samples, 11 were not analyzed, due to impurities.
Carbonyl compounds identified through GC-MS analysis in two Brazilian cachaça samples.
| Retention time | EI-MS data ( | Proposed structure | Peak percentage** |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.2 | 46 (100), 45 (80) | Formic acid | 2%/3% |
| 2.6 | 60 (80), 45 (100), 43 (90) | Acetic acid | 4%/2% |
| 2.8 | 74 (1), 43 (100), 31 (40) | Hydroxy 2-propanone | 4%/3% |
| 11.2 | 96 (20), 95 (100), 39 (60) | furfural | 4%/6% |
| 12.6 | 126 (1), 97 (90), 69 (60), 41 (100), 39 (80) | 4-Methyl-4-hepten-3-one | 32%/29% |
| 15.43 | 105 (1), 73 (60), 60 (100), 43 (70) | 2-Hydroxyethylcarbamate | 19%/40% |
| 16.5 | 126 (1), 97 (5), 82 (50), 81 (100), 53 (50), 39 (40) | 5-Hydroxymethyl furfural (5-HMF) | 28%/6% |
*Data obtained (molecular ions and fragments) by mass spectrum analysis.
**Percentages determined by peak areas in the chromatograms.
Figure 2Total ion chromatogram obtained in the analyses of cachaça sample from Minas Gerais through GC-MS. The numbers corresponding to the following compounds. 1: formic acid. 2: acetic acid. 3: hydroxy 2-propanone. 8: furfural, 10: 4-methyl-4-hepten-3-one. 20: 2-hydroxyethylcarbamate, 22: 5-hydroxymethyl furfural (5-HMF).