Real-Time Monitoring of Miniaturized Thermal Food Processing by Advanced Mass Spectrometric Techniques

Mass spectrometry is a popular and powerful analytical tool to study the effects of food processing. Industrial sampling, real-life sampling, or challenging academic research on process-related volatile and aerosol research often demand flexible, time-sensitive data acquisition by state-of-the-art m...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2023-01, Vol.95 (2), p.1694-1702
Hauptverfasser: Weidner, Leopold, Hemmler, Daniel, Rychlik, Michael, Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe
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container_issue 2
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container_title Analytical chemistry (Washington)
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creator Weidner, Leopold
Hemmler, Daniel
Rychlik, Michael
Schmitt-Kopplin, Philippe
description Mass spectrometry is a popular and powerful analytical tool to study the effects of food processing. Industrial sampling, real-life sampling, or challenging academic research on process-related volatile and aerosol research often demand flexible, time-sensitive data acquisition by state-of-the-art mass analyzers. Here, we show a laboratory-scaled, miniaturized, and highly controllable setup for the online monitoring of aerosols and volatiles from thermal food processing based on dielectric barrier discharge ionization (DBDI) mass spectrometry (MS). We demonstrate the opportunities offered by the setup from a foodomics perspective to study emissions from the thermal processing of wheat bread rolls at 210 °C by Fourier transformation ion cyclotron resonance MS. As DBDI is an emerging technology, we compared its ionization selectivity to established atmospheric pressure ionization tools: we found DBDI preferably ionizes saturated, nitrogenous compounds. We likewise identified a sustainable overlap in the selectivity of detected analytes with APCI and electrospray ionization (ESI). Further, we dynamically recorded chemical fingerprints throughout the thermal process. Unsupervised classification of temporal response patterns was used to describe the dynamic nature of the reaction system. Compared to established tools for real-time MS, our setup permits one to monitor chemical changes during thermal food processing at ultrahigh resolution, establishing an advanced perspective for real-time mass spectrometric analysis of food processing.
doi_str_mv 10.1021/acs.analchem.2c04874
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Further, we dynamically recorded chemical fingerprints throughout the thermal process. Unsupervised classification of temporal response patterns was used to describe the dynamic nature of the reaction system. 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subjects Aerosol research
Aerosols
Analyzers
Chemical fingerprinting
Chemistry
Controllability
Cyclotron resonance
Data acquisition
Dielectric barrier discharge
Emissions
Food
Food analysis
Food industry
Food processing
Food processing industry
Fourier transforms
Ionization
Ions
Mass spectrometry
Mass Spectrometry - methods
Mass spectroscopy
Monitoring
New technology
Real time
Sampling
Scientific imaging
Selectivity
Spectrometry, Mass, Electrospray Ionization
Spectroscopy
Volatile compounds
Volatiles
title Real-Time Monitoring of Miniaturized Thermal Food Processing by Advanced Mass Spectrometric Techniques
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