The Analysis of Alcoholic Beverages on the 30m x 0.25mm ID, 1.0μm SPB-20 Capillary Column
Applications | 2000 | MerckInstrumentation
Aroma and fusel oil compounds significantly influence the sensory quality and safety of distilled and fermented beverages. Routine monitoring of these minor constituents ensures consistency in flavor profiles, meets regulatory standards, and helps detect process deviations during fermentation and aging.
This application note evaluates the performance of a 30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 1.0 µm SPB-20 capillary GC column for simultaneous separation and quantitation of twelve common volatile components in alcoholic beverages. The study also demonstrates analysis of real-world samples including rum, bourbon, single malt scotch, and brandy.
Chromatographic separation was performed under the following conditions:
In a 40 % ethanol–water matrix, all twelve target compounds—including acetaldehyde, methanol, acetone, methyl acetate, n-propanol, 2-butanol, ethyl acetate, iso-butanol, n-butanol, isoamyl alcohol, active amyl alcohol, and sec-butyl acetate (internal standard)—were baseline or near-baseline resolved. The SPB-20’s inert surface delivered sharp, symmetrical peaks for alcohols and esters. Analysis of commercial beverages revealed distinct profiles for each sample type, confirming reliable quantitation of fusel oil components in complex matrices.
Advances in column technology and detector sensitivity may further reduce analysis time and detection limits. Coupling SPB-20 columns with mass spectrometric detectors could expand the method to trace-level odorant profiling. Online fermentation monitoring and automated sample introduction will enhance process control in industrial fermentations.
The 30 m × 0.25 mm ID SPB-20 capillary column offers an effective, high-performance alternative to packed columns for fusel oil analysis in alcoholic beverages. Its inert stationary phase and robust separation capabilities support precise quality control and flavor consistency across a range of distilled products.
Application Note 164, Supelco (2000)
GC, GC columns, Consumables
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerMerck
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Aroma and fusel oil compounds significantly influence the sensory quality and safety of distilled and fermented beverages. Routine monitoring of these minor constituents ensures consistency in flavor profiles, meets regulatory standards, and helps detect process deviations during fermentation and aging.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note evaluates the performance of a 30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 1.0 µm SPB-20 capillary GC column for simultaneous separation and quantitation of twelve common volatile components in alcoholic beverages. The study also demonstrates analysis of real-world samples including rum, bourbon, single malt scotch, and brandy.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Chromatographic separation was performed under the following conditions:
- Column: 30 m × 0.25 mm ID, 1.0 µm SPB-20 fused silica capillary
- Oven program: 40 °C hold for 5 min, ramp at 4 °C/min to 110 °C, final hold
- Injector temperature: 150 °C
- Detector temperature (FID): 210 °C
- Carrier gas: Nitrogen at 11 cm/s (alternative helium use can shorten analysis time)
- Injection: 1 μL, 25:1 split ratio
Main Results and Discussion
In a 40 % ethanol–water matrix, all twelve target compounds—including acetaldehyde, methanol, acetone, methyl acetate, n-propanol, 2-butanol, ethyl acetate, iso-butanol, n-butanol, isoamyl alcohol, active amyl alcohol, and sec-butyl acetate (internal standard)—were baseline or near-baseline resolved. The SPB-20’s inert surface delivered sharp, symmetrical peaks for alcohols and esters. Analysis of commercial beverages revealed distinct profiles for each sample type, confirming reliable quantitation of fusel oil components in complex matrices.
Benefits and Practical Applications
- High resolution of closely eluting isomers such as isoamyl and active amyl alcohol.
- Low bleed column suitable for volatile compound analysis.
- Cost-effective use of nitrogen carrier gas when helium is limited.
- Compatibility with routine quality control workflows in distilleries and testing laboratories.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advances in column technology and detector sensitivity may further reduce analysis time and detection limits. Coupling SPB-20 columns with mass spectrometric detectors could expand the method to trace-level odorant profiling. Online fermentation monitoring and automated sample introduction will enhance process control in industrial fermentations.
Conclusion
The 30 m × 0.25 mm ID SPB-20 capillary column offers an effective, high-performance alternative to packed columns for fusel oil analysis in alcoholic beverages. Its inert stationary phase and robust separation capabilities support precise quality control and flavor consistency across a range of distilled products.
Reference
Application Note 164, Supelco (2000)
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Bulletin 790C Improved Resolution of Alcoholic Beverage Components by Packed Column GC Analysts can attain superior resolution of alcoholic beverages by using 80/120 CarbopackTM B AW/5% or 6.6% Carbowax® 20M. Carbopack B AW/5% Carbowax 20M, developed specifically for analyses of…
Key words
acetate, acetateethyl, ethylisoamyl, isoamylpag, pagspme, spmeisobutanol, isobutanolwine, winecoriander, corianderalcohol, alcoholpropanol, propanolacetic, aceticamyl, amylacetaldehyde, acetaldehydesupelco, supelcoacid
The GC/MS Analysis of Impurities in Denatured Ethanol on the SPBä-1 Capillary Column
2000|Merck|Applications
Supelco Park Bellefonte, PA 16823-0048 USA Telephone 800-247-6628 • 814-359-3441 Fax 800-447-3044 • 814-359-3044 email: supelco@s ial.com http://www.sigma-aldrich.com Application Note 163 The GC/MS Analysis of Impurities in Denatured Ethanol on the SPB -1 Capillary Column ä A 60m x 0.25mm…
Key words
ethanol, ethanolday, dayturned, turneddhx, dhxether, etheralcohol, alcoholsda, sdaethyl, ethylacetate, acetateback, backdetect, detectimpurities, impuritiesdeliberately, deliberatelyisoamyl, isoamyltriethylamine
A Comparison Study of Different Capillary Columns for Analysis of Alcohol Congeners in Alcoholic Beverages
2016|Shimadzu|Applications
Application News AD-0124Ph Food and Beverages / GC-2010 A Comparison Study of Different Capillary Columns for Analysis of Alcohol Congeners in Alcoholic Beverages Introduction Alcoholic beverages contain a wide range of volatile components, primary of which are alcohols and…
Key words
alcohol, alcoholcapillary, capillarycolumn, columnisoamyl, isoamylcongeners, congenersalcoholic, alcoholicinjection, injectionanalyte, analyteacetate, acetatevelocity, velocityamyl, amylpacked, packedbeverages, beveragescarrier, carrieracetal
Analysis of Solvents in Industrial Atmospheres by Capillary GC
1995|Merck|Applications
Application Note 2 Analysis of Solvents in Industrial Atmospheres by Capillary GC Similar structures and boiling points among airborne solvents monitored in the workplace often require two GC columns that offer differing selectivities to separate and identify the solvents collected.…
Key words
acetate, acetatecellosolve, cellosolvecresol, cresolmethyl, methylxylene, xyleneisoamyl, isoamylisobutyl, isobutylketone, ketonebutyl, butylsolvents, solventsethyl, ethylcyclohexanol, cyclohexanolatmospheres, atmospherescyclohexanone, cyclohexanoneboiling