| Literature DB >> 30174344 |
Tomasz Majchrzak1, Wojciech Wojnowski1, Tomasz Dymerski1, Jacek Gębicki2, Jacek Namieśnik1.
Abstract
ABSTRACT: To safeguard the consumers' well-being, it is necessary to develop novel methods for determination of carcinogens in food, including volatiles generated during frying. The currently used procedures for analysis of volatile fraction of vegetable oils are not based on real-time measurements and thus do not enable the determination of carcinogenic compounds in frying fumes; instead, only the headspace or liquid fraction is sampled. In this article, described is an approach in which proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry with time-of-flight analyser (PTR-TOFMS) was used for real-time monitoring of carcinogenic compounds generated during thermal degradation of rapeseed oil. Using PTR-MS, it was possible to monitor the concentration of known volatile carcinogens according to the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), alongside BTEX compounds, acrolein, and selected aldehydes. Moreover, the applicability of several supervised data analysis methods for the classification of oil samples according to their degree of thermal degradation was presented, with best results obtained using the k-nearest neighbours algorithm. Proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry is a powerful technique for the determination of carcinogenic compounds generated during thermal degradation of edible oils. Further investigation of the chemical processes which occur during frying can lead to improvement of food safety.Entities:
Keywords: Food control; Lipids; Mass spectroscopy; Oxidations; Proton transfer reaction; Vegetable oil
Year: 2018 PMID: 30174344 PMCID: PMC6105211 DOI: 10.1007/s00706-018-2217-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Monatsh Chem ISSN: 0026-9247 Impact factor: 1.451
Fig. 1Changes of concentration (ppmv, vertical axis) of selected volatiles in the headspace of oil samples over time (minutes, horizontal axis) during heating and frying at 180 °C; SD indicated in grey
Tentative identification and quantification of monitored substances in volatile fraction of rapeseed oil samples during heating and frying
| Entry | Formula | Detected ion formula | Protonated mass/Da | Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Formaldehyde | CH2O | [CH2O]H+ | 31.018 | I Group IARC |
| 2 Ethylene oxide/acetaldehydea | C2H4O | [C2H4O]H+ | 45.033 | I Group IARC |
| 3 Ethanol | C2H6O | [C2H6O]H+ | 47.049 | I Group IARC |
| 4 1,3-Butadiene | C4H6 | [C4H6]H+ | 55.054 | I Group IARC |
| 5 2-Propenal | C3H4O | [C3H4O] H+ | 57.033 | High toxicity to humans |
| 6 Benzene | C6H6 | [C6H6]H+ | 79.054 | I Group IARC, BTEX |
| 7 Pentanal | C5H10O | [C5H10O]H+ | 87.080 | Quality marker |
| 8 Toluene | C7H8 | [C7H8]H+ | 93.070 | BTEX |
| 9 Hexanal | C6H12O | [C6H12O]H+ | 101.096 | Quality marker |
| 10 Ethylbenzene/xylenesa | C8H10 | [C8H10]H+ | 107.086 | BTEX |
| 11 Nonanal | C9H18O | [C9H18O]H+ | 143.143 | Quality marker |
aStructural isomers
bStandard deviation calculated based on repetitions
Fig. 2Confusion matrices for selected supervised data analysis methods