Abstract

Certain volatile thiols are some of the most potent odour-active molecules that are found in nature. Thiols play significant roles in the aroma qualities of a range of foods and beverages, including wine, with extremely low odour detection thresholds (nanogram per litre range). A fundamental understanding of their formation, fate, and impact essentially depends on the development of suitable analytical methods. The analysis of volatile thiols in foods and beverages is a challenging task when considering (1) the complexity of food and beverage matrices and (2) that thiols are highly reactive, low molecular-weight volatiles that are generally present at trace to ultra-trace concentrations. For the past three decades, the analytical evaluation of volatile thiols has been intensively performed in various foods and beverages, and many novel techniques related to derivatisation, isolation, separation, and detection have been developed, particularly by wine researchers. This review aims to provide an up-to-date overview of the major analytical methodologies that are proposed for potent volatile thiol analysis in wine, foods, and other beverages. The analytical challenges for thiol analysis in foods and beverages are outlined, and the main analytical methods and recent advances in methodology are summarised and evaluated for their strengths and limitations. The key analytical aspects reviewed include derivatisation and sample preparation techniques, chromatographic separation, mass spectrometric detection, matrix effects, and quantitative analysis. In addition, future perspectives on volatile thiol research are also suggested.

Highlights

  • Importance of Thiols to the Aroma of Foods and BeveragesAroma is inarguably one of the most important quality aspects for any food or beverage product, with unique and characteristic aromas being attributed to a large range of volatile compounds with various physico-chemical properties

  • When using mass spectrometry (MS) detection, electron ionisation (EI) or chemical ionisation (CI) modes are proposed for gas chromatography (GC)–MS analysis of thiols, and electrospray ionisation (ESI) in positive mode is frequently reported for the liquid chromatography (LC)–MS methods

  • This review presents an up-to-date overview of the analysis of potent volatile thiols in foods and beverages, with a focus on wine analysis, because that is where many of the methodological advances have arisen

Read more

Summary

Introduction—Importance of Thiols to the Aroma of Foods and Beverages

Aroma is inarguably one of the most important quality aspects for any food or beverage product, with unique and characteristic aromas being attributed to a large range of volatile compounds with various physico-chemical properties. VSCs play an important role in the aromas of foods and beverages, because of their broad presence, and for their significant sensory contributions due to concentrations that are well above their low odour detection thresholds (ODT) [2,3]. (c) Bibliometric map of volatile thiol most studied volatile thiols in wine and, Bibliometric map of volatile thiol research research visualised from a total of publications Web of Science visualised from a total of 395 publications (from 1990–2019) retrieved from Web of Science Core

Literature analysis graph construction "Volatile
Analytical Challenges and Requirements
Thiol Isolation—Extraction and Derivatisation
Selective Extraction with Metal Ions
Derivatisation Approaches
Derivatisations for LC Analysis of Thiols
Analytical Instrumentation
Analysis by GC
Analysis by LC
Other Instruments
Matrix Effects and Quantitative Analysis
Findings
Conclusions and Outlook
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call