| Literature DB >> 29682506 |
Tatiane Melina Guerreiro1, Kumi Shiota Ozawa2, Estela de Oliveira Lima1, Carlos Fernando Odir Rodrigues Melo1, Diogo Noin de Oliveira1, Simone Pereira do Nascimento Triano2, Rodrigo Ramos Catharino1.
Abstract
Cachaça is a popular spirit produced in Brazil, obtained by distillation of fermented sugar cane. Among the contaminants arising from production, ethyl carbamate is a carcinogenic compound that occurs naturally in fermented foods and beverages; in Brazil, the maximum limit established by current legislation is 150 µg L-1. Quality control is usually performed using gas chromatography; however, robustness and reproducibility of quantitative results may be severely impaired, as the addition of 6-30 g L-1 of sucrose is a common procedure for taste standardization, directly interfering in the results. This work describes the development of a novel method to improve ethyl carbamate quantification in cachaças using a new approach of QuEChERS extraction based on salting-out phenomenon, to effectively separate ethanol from sugar-containing water. Eighteen different brands of cachaça were analyzed. The proposed methodology was able to eliminate components that contaminate the sample flow path in the gas chromatography system, while improving precision and accuracy by using a triple-quadrupole approach, in comparison with the methodology usually employed: direct analysis of cachaça samples with no sample prep. Results indicate that this approach is more effective due to the removal of sugar content, with no impact in costs per analysis.Entities:
Keywords: QuEChERS; alcoholic beverages; cachaça; ethyl carbamate; gas chromatography–mass spectrometry
Year: 2018 PMID: 29682506 PMCID: PMC5897439 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Scheme of the solution preparation for the standard addition method.
Figure 2Sandwich injection scheme.
Figure 3Extracted ion chromatogram of solutions with 6 and 30 g L−1 of sugar and mass spectrometry spectrum of 365 (sucrose).
Figure 4Extracted ion chromatogram of 6 g L−1 of sugar (A) and with a sample of cachaça (B) before and after QuEChERS extraction, injecting only the organic layer for both samples.
Sugar percentage removal by extracted ion chromatogram peak area.
| Area before salting-out | Area after salting-out | Removal percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control 6 g L−1 | 83,180,455.52 | 405,192.79 | 99.51 |
| Control 30 g L−1 | 193,679,686.4 | 1,906,989.36 | 99.01 |
| 82,252,299.47 | 706,338.66 | 99.10 |
Figure 5Overlapping chromatogram of standard addition method, which shows the gradual increase of the peak area of ethyl carbamate.
Recovery (Rec) results by standard addition and external calibration methods (n = 3).
| Standard addition | External calibration | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 (%) | Day 2 (%) | Σ (%) | Day 1 (%) | Day 2 (%) | Σ (%) | |
| Rec (50 ppb) | 124 | 116 | 120 | 98 | 91 | 94 |
| RSD | 3 | 9 | 7 | 0 | 2 | 4 |
| Rec (100 ppb) | 104 | 106 | 105 | 81 | 84 | 83 |
| RSD | 8 | 10 | 9 | 3 | 1 | 3 |
| Rec (210 ppb) | 85 | 103 | 94 | 79 | 81 | 80 |
| RSD | 1 | 1 | 9 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Figure 6Comparison between the standard addition curve (A) and the external calibration curve (B) for quantification of the ethyl carbamate.
Mean concentration (MC, n = 3), absolute error of the measurements (n = 3), and final concentration (FC) of ethyl carbamate in the tested cachaça samples [commercial (Comm) and craft].
| Sample | MC | Error (%) | FC (ppb) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Comm 1 | 212.4429 | 0 | 53.1107 |
| Comm 2 | 117.1811 | 0 | 29.2953 |
| Comm 3 | 26.8651 | 2 | 6.7163 |
| Comm 4 | 245.4955 | 2 | 61.3739 |
| Comm 5 | 250.6639 | 1 | 62.6660 |
| Comm 6 | 186.6799 | 2 | 46.6700 |
| Comm 7 | 105.0681 | 0 | 26.2670 |
| Comm 8 | 493.4672 | 6 | 123.3668 |
| Comm 9 | 250.0942 | 0 | 62.5236 |
| Craft 1 | 530.7167 | 3 | 132.6792 |
| Craft 2 | 604.5791 | 5 | 151.1448 |
| Craft 3 | 306.7847 | 1 | 76.6962 |
| Craft 4 | 467.9504 | 29 | 116.9876 |
| Craft 5 | 176.5997 | 5 | 44.1499 |
| Craft 6 | 61.9448 | 1 | 15.4862 |
| Craft 7 | 205.4501 | 17 | 51.3625 |
| Craft 8 | 54.0808 | 2 | 13.5202 |
| Craft 9 | 138.3081 | 1 | 34.5770 |