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Monitoring of the Brewing Process with GC-MS

Posters | 2019 | LECOInstrumentation
GC/MSD, SPME, GC/TOF
Industries
Food & Agriculture
Manufacturer
LECO

Summary

Significance of the Topic


Monitoring volatile and semi-volatile compounds during brewing is essential for controlling flavor development, detecting off-flavors, and optimizing process efficiency. Gas chromatography–mass spectrometry (GC–MS) paired with headspace solid-phase microextraction (HS-SPME) provides a powerful platform to profile aroma compounds at key production stages and guide quality assurance.

Objectives and Study Overview


This study aimed to characterize chemical changes throughout the brewing process by:
  • Sampling five critical points: pre-boil, post-boil, full fermenter, end of fermentation, and bright beer tank.
  • Profiling volatile and semi-volatile analytes to understand their formation, degradation, and inter-relationships.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Samples (5 mL) were collected in 20 mL vials and analyzed using HS-SPME coupled to a Pegasus BT GC-TOFMS system. Key conditions included:
  • Autosampler: LECO L-PAL3
  • SPME fiber: DVB/Car/PDMS, 10 min incubation + 20 min extraction at 35 °C
  • Fiber conditioning: 5 min at 250 °C; desorption 3 min splitless at 250 °C
  • Column: Restek Stabilwax 30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 μm
  • Carrier gas: He at 1.40 mL/min
  • Oven program: 3 min at 40 °C, ramp 10 °C/min to 250 °C, hold 1 min
  • Mass range: m/z 33–500 at 10 spectra/s

Retention indices were calculated using an alkane standard. Automated deconvolution resolved coelutions and enabled confident identification against NIST databases.

Main Results and Discussion


Over hundreds of compounds spanning esters, terpenes, acids, alcohols, aldehydes, ketones, furans, aromatics, nitrogen- and sulfur-containing species were detected. Representative trends include:
  • Terpenes (e.g., α-pinene, β-myrcene) increased during the boil and declined thereafter, reflecting hop extraction.
  • Esters showed two patterns: some peaked post-boil, others rose sharply during fermentation (e.g., ethyl octanoate).
  • Organic acids and higher alcohols appeared predominantly after yeast activity, with ethanol formation marking fermentation onset.
  • Key analytes such as hexanal declined after the boil, β-myrcene peaked at the boil, and ethanol and ethyl octanoate increased during fermentation.
  • Deconvolution was crucial for distinguishing overlapping signals, revealing subtle changes masked in total ion chromatograms.
  • Reaction networks, such as furfural conversion to furfuryl alcohol by yeast and subsequent furfuryl ethyl ether formation, were mapped through temporal abundance patterns.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Detailed volatile profiling enables:
  • Early detection of unwanted off-flavors and process deviations
  • Optimization of hop addition and boiling parameters to fine-tune aroma contributions
  • Quality control through targeted monitoring of signature compounds
  • Data-driven decisions to improve yield and sensory consistency

Future Trends and Opportunities


Advances that could enhance process monitoring include:
  • Real-time, inline sampling coupled with rapid GC or sensor arrays
  • Chemometric and machine learning models for predictive flavor control
  • Non-target screening to discover novel aroma markers
  • Miniaturized or portable GC–MS platforms for on-site brewery analysis
  • Integration of chemical data with sensory and consumer insights

Conclusion


HS-SPME GC-TOFMS profiling across brewing stages offers comprehensive insight into volatile compound dynamics. Automated deconvolution enhances analyte resolution, and trend analysis guides flavor optimization and quality assurance throughout the brewing process.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

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