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Analysis of Aroma Components in Beer Using HS-20 and Nexis™ GC-2030

Applications | 2019 | ShimadzuInstrumentation
GC, HeadSpace
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
Shimadzu

Summary

Importance of the topic



Beer flavor is determined by a complex mixture of volatile aroma compounds such as alcohols and esters. Accurate profiling of these components is essential for quality control, consistency across batches, and development of new products in the brewing industry.

Study Objectives and Overview



This study quantified nine key aroma substances in five commercial beers using headspace gas chromatography coupled with flame ionization detection (HS-GC-FID). A principal component analysis (PCA) and hierarchical clustering analysis (HCA) were applied to highlight differences in aroma profiles and to classify beers based on their fermentation type.

Methodology



A mixed stock of aroma standards was diluted in 4% ethanol to prepare calibration solutions. Ten grams of standard solution or non-deaerated beer sample were placed in a headspace vial with an internal standard. After sealing, samples underwent headspace extraction in loop mode and subsequent GC-FID analysis. Calibration curves were used for quantitation of target compounds.

Used Instrumentation



  • Headspace sampler: Shimadzu HS-20 (loop mode, 40 °C oven, 70 °C sample line, 80 °C transfer line).
  • Gas chromatograph: Shimadzu Nexis GC-2030 with FID-2030.
  • Column: SH-Rtx™-Wax, 30 m × 0.53 mm I.D., 1 µm film.
  • Carrier gas: helium at 5 mL/min column flow; detector gases: hydrogen (32 mL/min), air (200 mL/min), makeup helium (24 mL/min).

Main Results and Discussion



Quantitative data (mg/L) revealed ethyl acetate levels from 12.6 to 32.6 and isoamyl alcohol from 52.3 to 62.6 across beers. PCA score plots and HCA dendrograms distinctly separated Beer D (a top-fermented ale) from the lager samples, indicating a unique ratio of eight common aroma compounds.

Benefits and Practical Applications



This HS-GC-FID method provides high sensitivity for routine monitoring of beer aroma constituents. The integration of chemometric analysis facilitates rapid differentiation of beer styles, supporting quality assurance and product development in breweries.

Future Trends and Possibilities



Emerging multidimensional GC techniques and real-time headspace sensors promise enhanced compound resolution and faster analysis. Integration of advanced chemometrics with inline monitoring could enable dynamic control of fermentation and flavor consistency.

Conclusion



The combined HS-GC-FID and multivariate analysis approach effectively profiles key beer aroma compounds and allows clear classification of products according to fermentation type and compositional differences.

References



  • Brewers Association of Japan, BCOJ Beer Analysis Methods (2013).

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