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Thermal behaviour of selected flavour ingredients and additives under simulated cigarette combustion and tobacco heating conditions

Czégény, Zsuzsanna and Bozi, János and Sebestyén, Zoltán and Blazsó, Marianne and Jakab, Emma and Barta-Rajnai, Eszter and Forster, Mark and Nicol, James and McAdam, Kevin G. and Liu, Chuan (2016) Thermal behaviour of selected flavour ingredients and additives under simulated cigarette combustion and tobacco heating conditions. Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis, 121. pp. 190-204. ISSN 0165-2370

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Abstract

An experimental method of pyrolysis-gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (Py-GC/MS) is proposed to evaluate the fate of selected flavour compounds in low-temperature (300°C) tobacco heating conditions. The thermal behaviour of five flavouring compounds (citronellol, menthol, tartaric acid, cinnamic acid, and guaiacol) was studied under conditions to simulate low-temperature tobacco heating at 300°C, and compared with results obtained using simulated cigarette-combustion conditions with a temperature program up to 900°C. The impact of oxygen and nitrogen atmospheres on the thermal transfer and breakdown patterns was also investigated. It was established that the four flavouring compounds of high volatility (citronellol, menthol, cinnamic acid, and guaiacol) evaporated to a high degree (88-100 %) during the low- and high-temperature experiments, as well. Guaiacol was the most stable compound under the test conditions; only 0.3 % decomposition was detected at 900°C with the oxidative atmosphere. Thermal decomposition reactions were substantially less extensive at the low-temperature heating conditions than with the high-temperature pyrolysis and simulated cigarette combustion. Citronellol and cinnamic acid produced about 1.5 % decomposition products, while menthol produced 0.8 %. In general, dehydrogenation reactions were more pronounced in the oxidative atmosphere, while aromatisation was significant in the nitrogen atmosphere, and at high temperatures. More oxo-compounds and less aromatic hydrocarbons were formed in the oxidative atmosphere. Other types of reactions took place with tartaric acid, due to its low volatility. Extensive formation of light carboxylic acids was observed at the low temperature, and cyclic compounds were also formed in addition to carbon oxides and water under both nitrogen and oxidative atmospheres. Intermolecular reactions are proposed to explain these observations. At high temperatures the pyrolysis products of tartaric acid were the same as at low temperatures, but in the oxidative atmosphere more carboxylic acids and less aldehydes were formed than in pure nitrogen. These results demonstrate the flavour compound’s thermal stability depends strongly on the exact thermal history (heating temperature, heating duration and gas atmosphere) that they are exposed to. The information obtained will be of interests in understanding the thermal behaviour of these and other flavour compounds used in tobacco heating products.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Q Science / természettudomány > QD Chemistry / kémia > QD01 Analytical chemistry / analitikai kémia
Depositing User: Dr Zsuzsanna Czégény
Date Deposited: 21 Sep 2016 13:18
Last Modified: 22 Sep 2016 09:17
URI: http://real.mtak.hu/id/eprint/39789

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