* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Flavonoids
		                    
		                    
								Survey							
                            
		                
		                
                            
                            
								Document related concepts							
                        
                        
                    
						
						
							Transcript						
					
					Introduction to Oxidation in Wine Andrew L. Waterhouse Department of Viticulture & Enology University of California, Davis Oxidation Avoidance Traditional limit to wine preservation  Current technology can exclude oxygen  Wine oxidation - a fault?  Manage Wine Oxidation  At crush / press – Anaerobic press to hyperoxidation  Fermentation – Add oxygen for yeast, reductive aromas  Post fermentation/s – Micro-ox, barrels, racking  In bottle – Affects flavor development Oxygen Measurement  Standard meter – Limit of Detection ~0.5 ppm  Orbisphere or other Clark electrode – LOD ~2 ppb  Nomasense, Mocon, others – Oxydots, fiber optic measure-contact not needed! 10 ppb – Temperature sensitive! Antioxidants SO2  Ascorbic acid  Glutathione  Wine Oxidation Chemistry O OH O2 + EtOH O OH Acetaldehyde + H2O2 Step 1 Step 2 Oxygen reacts with phenols to yield quinone and hydrogen peroxide  Hydrogen peroxide oxidizes ethanol to acetaldehyde  Known Oxidation Products  Quinones – Thiol adducts – Coupling Products  Aldehydes – Acetaldehyde – Glyoxylic Acid • (Tartaric Acid product) – Flavonoid coupling OH O O Oxidative Changes in Wine  Formation of quinones from catechols – React with thiols, SO2, ascorbate, phenolics  Fenton oxidation of alcohols – Formation of aldehydes – Reactions of all other substances Oxygen Pathway in Wine RC=O O2 RC=O Fe+3 Fe+2 RCOH 5 1 (Hydroperoxyl radical) O2 + H Fe+3 RCHOH (Hydroxyl radical) Fe+3 4 2 Fe+2 (Semiquinone radical) 3 (Quinone) (Hydrogen peroxide) Sulfur Dioxide and Oxygen  Sulfite is the sink for oxidation O2 + 2 SO2 2 SO3  1 mg of O2 will consume 4 mg SO2   SO3 + H2O H2SO4 Polyphenols are Pro-oxidants  Generation of quinone and hydrogen peroxide from dioxygen OH Fe+2 HO O O2 H+ O O + HO OH + OH Catechin + 3-Mercaptohexanol OH O OH O HO HO O OH OH + O S SH OH HO OH Nikolantonaki , ACA 660: 102 (10)  Blanchard, AJEV 55:115 (04)  OH Catechin dimer in model juice  Poupard, J Chrom A, 1179: 161 (08) Quinone Options OH OH ? OH Ascorbate OH O OH HO OH Phloroglucinol O RSH OH S R OH (Quinone) AA's, Strecker Degradation Phenolic Coupling (polymerization) SO2 OH Aldehydes ? OH Mercaptan Trapping Oxygen Pathway in Wine RC=O O2 RC=O Fe+3 Fe+2 RCOH 5 1 (Hydroperoxyl radical) O2 + H Fe+3 RCHOH (Hydroxyl radical) Fe+3 4 2 Fe+2 (Semiquinone radical) 3 (Quinone) (Hydrogen peroxide) Peroxide Competition Fe+3 H2O2 Fe+2 SO2 H2O ·OH EtOH CH3CHO Wine Minor Components Red Wine Composition, Minor Components Acetaldehyde Volatile Acidity Glycerol Sugar Higher Alcohols Sorbitol & Mannitol Phenols Sulfites Minerals * Esters Amino acids Acid Oxidation of Wine Acids (Alcohols) to Carbonyls  Pyruvic – Observed in wine – Reacts with anthocyanins to make wine pigments  Glyoxylic – Observed in wine – Condenses with flavan-3-ols O OH O H2O2 HO O Fe+2 CH3 CH3 Lactic Acid (or Malic) O H2O2 HO OH O Pyruvic Acid O OH OH Fe+2 OH O HO O OH O OH CH OH Tartaric Acid Hydroxymalonic Glyoxylic Acid Aldehyde Pigment Reactions  “D-ring” formation by acetaldehyde and pyruvate R1 O R1 OH OH H HO O R2 OH + HO + O Glu O R2 O or OH O Glu O O R R = H, O OH Alcohol Oxidations with ∙OH  Aldehydes known oxidation products Wine Oxidation Aroma and color changes  Can be managed  – A few key steps need better understanding Many current investigations  State of the art and practice today