Abstract

An analytical method for the quantification in wines of the strong-smelling compound, 1-octen-3-one, has been developed. 1-Octen-3-one is extracted by passing 90 mL of wine through a solid phase extraction (SPE) cartridge packed with 90 mg of LiChrolut-EN resins. Wine major volatiles and potential interferences are removed by washing up with 9 mL of a 40% methanol–water solution containing 1% NaHCO 3. The ketone is subsequently derivatised with O-(2,3,4,5,6-pentafluorobenzyl) hydroxylamine (PFBHA) to form its two isomeric oximes. Reaction takes place in the same cartridge at room temperature (25 °C) in 15 min. The excess of reagent is then removed by washing with 20 mL of a 0.05 M sulphuric acid solution. The corresponding oximes are further eluted with pentane and determined by gas chromatography coupled with ion trap tandem mass spectrometry (GC–MS/MS) by non-resonant fragmentation of the m/ z 140 parent ion and subsequent analysis of the corresponding daughter ions ( m/ z 77, 79, 94 for the trans and m/ z 77 and 79 for the cis-isomer, respectively). The analytical signal is highly specific and in all samples the obtained MS spectrum are fully coincident with those from synthetic standards. Recoveries were in all the studied cases 100%. Precision (measured as R.S.D.) is better than 5%, linearity holds at least up to 900 ng L −1 ( r 2 = 0.9990), and the method detection limit is 0.75 ng L −1, well below the olfactory threshold of the compound (15 ng L −1). The range of concentrations found in normal, non-spoiled dry wines goes from 7 to 61 ng L −1. Sensory experiments have shown, however, that such differences do not seem to be enough to explain sensory differences.

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