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What’s in Your Beer? Part 2: GC/MS Static Head Space with a Highly Inert 624 Capillary GC Column

Posters | 2018 | Agilent Technologies | PittconInstrumentation
GC/MSD, HeadSpace, GC/SQ
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Characterizing volatile and semi-volatile components in beer is critical for quality control, flavor development, and product consistency in the brewing industry. Static headspace GC/MS enables non-invasive sampling of the headspace above liquid matrices and is particularly well suited to monitor fermentation by-products, aroma compounds, and organic acids that influence taste, stability, and authenticity of beer.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study demonstrates the advantages of using a highly inert Agilent J&W DB-624UI capillary GC column in static headspace GC/MS analyses of beers. Key goals include:
  • Improving peak shape and detection sensitivity for organic acids (acetic, propionic, butanoic, octanoic acids).
  • Comparing performance against a competitor’s cyanopropyl phenyl phase.
  • Profiling flavor components across various summer-style beers to illustrate method robustness.

Methodology and Instrumentation


The analytical setup used for static headspace GC/MS profiling included:
  • Column: Agilent J&W DB-624UI (30 m × 0.32 mm × 1.8 µm).
  • Carrier gas: Helium at ~2.6 mL/min (39.6 cm/s) under constant flow.
  • Headspace sampler: Agilent 7697A with vial equilibration at 85 °C (20 min), loop at 85 °C, transfer line at 100 °C.
  • Injection: Split 20:1 at 250 °C with an ultra-inert wool liner.
  • Oven program: 35 °C (7.45 min), ramp to 100 °C at 6.72 °C/min (2.23 min), then to 220 °C at 10.08 °C/min (4.17 min).
  • Detection: FID at 280 °C (H₂ 40 mL/min, Air 400 mL/min, N₂ makeup 30 mL/min).

Main Results and Discussion


Comparison of test mixtures (2 ppm aldehydes, alcohols, esters) and a range of summer-style beers revealed:
  • The inert DB-624UI column provided sharp, symmetric peaks for organic acids with consistent response across replicates.
  • A competitor cyanopropyl phenyl phase showed severe tailing and failure to detect certain acids at low concentration.
  • Static headspace GC/MS chromatograms clearly differentiate beer styles (e.g., Hefe-Wizen, Lemon Shandy, Tangerine Ale) based on their volatile profiles.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The use of an inert GC column in static headspace GC/MS offers:
  • Improved sensitivity and reproducibility for acidic and polar components crucial to flavor balance.
  • Non-destructive sample handling, reducing matrix effects and prolonging column lifetime.
  • Rapid screening tool for QA/QC in breweries, enabling real-time monitoring of fermentation and storage stability.

Future Trends and Applications


Emerging trends in beverage analysis include:
  • Integration of fast GC and high-resolution MS for deeper profiling of trace components.
  • Automation and multivariate data analysis to predict flavor attributes and shelf life.
  • Application of headspace-GC/MS to other fermented products (wine, spirits, kombucha) with tailored column chemistries.

Conclusion


Static headspace GC/MS using a highly inert Agilent J&W DB-624UI column significantly enhances detection and peak shape of organic acids and volatile flavor compounds in beer. This method provides robust, reproducible profiles that support product development, quality assurance, and authentication efforts in the brewing sector.

Reference


  • Lynam K., Agilent Publication #5991-1136EN: Screen Beer by GC/MS Static Headspace with the Agilent J&W DB-624 Ultra Inert Capillary Column, 2018.
  • Zou Y. & Lynam K., Agilent Publication #5991-6638EN: Analysis of Distilled Spirits Using an Agilent J&W DB-Wax Ultra Inert Capillary GC Column, 2017.
  • Lynam K., Agilent Publication #5991-0659EN: Agilent J&W DB-624 Ultra Inert Capillary Column Screens Distilled Spirits by GC Static Headspace, 2016.

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