Comparative analysis of volatile and phenolic composition of alternative wood chips from cherry, acacia and oak for potential use in enology.


Autoria(s): Jordão, António M.; Lozano, Virginia; Correia, Ana C.; Ortega-Heras, Mirian; González-San José, Maria L.
Data(s)

10/01/2017

10/01/2017

23/10/2016

Resumo

The aim of present work was to investigate the phenolic and volatile composition of cherry, acacia, and oak (from different species) wood chips. By the use of HPLC-DAD 18 different phenolic compounds were detected and quantified while for volatile composition, 33 different compounds were detected by GC-MS. In general, wood samples from oak species showed the higher number of phenolic compounds detected, while cherry wood samples showed the lowest levels. In addition, some individual phenolic compounds were detected, specifically in some wood samples, such as robinetin in acacia woods and naringenin in cherry wood. For volatile composition, cherry wood chips samples showed the lowest volatile composition followed by increasing order by acacia, French, Portuguese and American wood chip samples. Oak wood chip samples from American species showed the highest volatile content, as a result of high levels of several specific compounds (furfural, 5-methyfurfural, β-methyl-γ-octalactones, guaiacol, vanillin and siringaldehyde).

info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Identificador

Jordão, A. M., Lozano, V., Correia, A. C, Ortega-Heras, M., & González-SanJosé, M. L. (2016). Comparative analysis of volatile and phenolic composition of alternative wood chips from cherry, acacia and oak for potential use in enology. Proceedings of 39th World Congress of Vine and Wine. "BIO Web of Conferences" 7, 02012,1-4. DOI: 10.1051/bioconf/20160702012.

2117-4458

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.19/3636

10.1051/bioconf/20160702012

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

EDP Sciences

Direitos

restrictedAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Palavras-Chave #wine #cherry #oak #acacia #phenolic #volatile #oenology
Tipo

conferenceObject