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RESEARCH PRODUCT

A HS-SPME-GC-MS analysis of IR heated wood: Impact of the water content on the depth profile of oak wood aromas extractability

Régis D. GougeonCharlie J. DuvalAndrei PridaPatrick PerréKarine Gourrat

subject

[ SDV.AEN ] Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionOak woodFurfural01 natural scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0404 agricultural biotechnologyFood and NutritionHS-SPMEHemicelluloseWater contentAromaInfrared heat sourceChromatographybiologyVanillin010401 analytical chemistryExtraction (chemistry)04 agricultural and veterinary sciencesbiology.organism_classification040401 food science0104 chemical sciencesEugenolchemistryoak wood;hs–spme;gc–ms;infrared heat source;volatile compoundAlimentation et NutritionVolatile compoundsGuaiacolGC-MS[SDV.AEN]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Food and NutritionFood Science

description

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0963996913003736; International audience; Controlled and reproducible IR heat treatments were applied to oak wood surfaces in order to establish a depth-profiled picture of the extractability of volatile compounds, with particular emphasis on the impact of the initial water content. Headspace-solid phase microextraction-gas chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (HS-SPME-GC-MS) has been used to compare the concentrations of six aroma compounds (vanillin, furfural, eugenol; guaiacol and cis- and trans-whisky lactones) in hydroalcoholic extracts of series of slices representative of the first 8 mm of the wood facing the IR source. Results have shown that although water is supposed to have a delaying effect with respect to the thermal degradation of wood macromolecules, it can favor heat transfers and thus promote higher-than-expected transient local temperatures in a soaked wood. Yet, distinct behaviors could be observed between thermally-generated compounds (vanillin and guaiacol), where adsorbed water seemed to prevent the thermal degradation of the parent macromolecule, and thermally-degraded compounds such as eugenol where the presence of water would balance the compound degradation through a more efficient extraction process of this biogenesis molecule. Furfural exhibited a more complex behavior since its production as a result of hemicellulose degradation was thermally-favored in the presence of adsorbed water. Finally, whatever the applied heat flux and regardless of the initial water content, temperatures experienced by the wood deeper than 4 mm, were lower than 160 °C, which meant that beyond that depth, the initial wood composition was unaffected.

10.1016/j.foodres.2013.07.008https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00866391