Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Headspace solid-phase microextraction analysis of volatile sulphides and disulphides in wine aroma.

Sulphur compounds (S-compounds) are important constituents of wine off-flavours. Headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) combined with gas chromatography coupled to flame photometric detection (GC-FPD) was used to develop a suitable method to analyse volatile sulphides and disulphides. This is a very simple and fast technique which gives good reproducibility at microgram/l levels (relative standard deviations < 10%). The analytes were extracted from the headspace of the samples by using either polydimethylsiloxane or polyacrylate coated fused-silica fibers in an SPME unit. Then, the fiber was inserted into the injector of a gas chromatograph and the extracted S-compounds were thermally desorbed. The influence of different parameters, such as ionic strength, stirring, headspace volume, ethanol concentration, time and temperature of extraction, was studied. The extraction of the fibers varies considerably for the different sulphur compounds studied. The most volatile compounds were the least extracted by the coating fibers tested. The standard additions technique, applied to real samples, gave the recoveries > 94%. The detection limits range between 3 micrograms/l and 50 ng/l. The overall process was successfully applied to identify and quantify S-compounds in white and red wines.

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