Abstract

A method has been developed for the quantitative estimation of volatile sulphur compounds in beer at levels below 0.1 μg litre−1. The method relies on the concentration of beer headspace volatiles onto a porous polymer followed by injection into a capillary gas chromatographic column using a thermal desorption cold trap injector. The volatile components are separated using temperature programming and detected by a flame photometric detector specific for sulphur compounds. The mean concentrations and the estimates of r95 (μg litre−1) for volatile sulphur compounds measured in a commercial lager were respectively: methanethiol (0.33, 0.30); dimethyl sulphide (19.3, 5.3); carbon disulphide (0.42, 0.32); ethylene sulphide (0.37, 0.05); 1-propanethiol (0.11, 0.02); methyl thioacetate (11.7; 2.7); methyl disulphide (0.34, 0.42). The method is a significant improvement over previous techniques for the quantification of sulphur-containing volatiles in beer.

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