Abstract

Vinegar is produced from the fermentation of agricultural materials and diluted acetic acid (diluted with water to 4–30% by volume) via sequential ethanol and acetic acid fermentation. The concentration of acetic acid must be measured during vinegar production. A Community method for analyzing acetic acid in vinegar is a non-specific method based on the assumption that the total acid concentration of the vinegar is attributable to the acetic acid. It consists of titration with a strong base in the presence of an indicator. This test is laborious and has a time-consuming character. In this work, a highly specific automated enzymatic method was validated, for the first time, to quantify the acetic acid in the wine vinegar, in terms of linearity, precision, repeatability, and uncertainty measurement. The results were compared to the Community method of analysis. Regression coefficient ≅ 1 and the normal distribution of residuals in the ANOVA test confirmed the method’s linearity. LLOD (0.946 ppm) and LLOQ (2.00 ppm) defined the method’s sensitivity. The results of the tested and the Community methods, linearly distributed in the Shapiro–Wilk test, confirmed the method’s repeatability. The few anomalous data in the Huber test were due to random errors. The high selectivity of the enzymatic method, which exclusively measures acetic acid concentration, determined the significant differences between the two tests, examined in the accuracy determination. The enzymatic method can be considered applicable since its precision and uncertainty were lower than the Community method values (relative percentage deviations = 10%). The enzymatic method compared to the Community method reduces the analysis time and the risk of errors due to operators (avoid pipetting errors and wrong calculations), minimizes solvent and the sample consumption and guarantees assay quality through method standardization.

Highlights

  • In the European Member States, products obtained by the fermentation of agricultural materials or by the dilution with water of acetic acid are marketed under the name “vinegar” [1]

  • We propose the validation of an automated enzymatic method to identify and quantify acetic acid in vinegar

  • An enzymatic method on an automated spectrophotometric system was used for the quantification of acetic acid in vinegar

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In the European Member States, products obtained by the fermentation of agricultural materials or by the dilution with water of acetic acid are marketed under the name “vinegar” [1]. In Italy, three types of wine vinegar are produced: white wine vinegar, red wine vinegar, and balsamic vinegar The latter is obtained from fresh grapes, concentrated by a slow heating process (to 1/3 of its original volume), fermented by yeasts (Zygosaccaharomyces) and bacteria (Gluconobacter), and subsequently refined in wooden barrels (25 years) [3]. A Community method for the analysis of acetic acid consists of direct titration with sodium hydroxide in the presence of phenolphthalein [4]. This method is not selective; it determines the total acidity of the vinegar and attributes it to the content of acetic acid.

Apparatus
Reference Procedure
Spectrophotometric Method Validation Parameters
Statistical Analysis
Method Sensitivity
Measurement Uncertainty
Method Precision
Accuracy Test
Discussion
Conclusions
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