6 resultados para particulate fraction
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Lipolysis and oxidation of lipids in foods are the major biochemical and chemical processes that cause food quality deterioration, leading to the characteristic, unpalatable odour and flavour called rancidity. In addition to unpalatability, rancidity may give rise to toxic levels of certain compounds like aldehydes, hydroperoxides, epoxides and cholesterol oxidation products. In this PhD study chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques were employed to determine the degree of rancidity in different animal products and its relationship with technological parameters like feeding fat sources, packaging, processing and storage conditions. To achieve this goal capillary gas chromatography (CGC) was employed not only to determine the fatty acids profile but also, after solid phase extraction, the amount of free fatty acids (FFA), diglycerides (DG), sterols (cholesterol and phytosterols) and cholesterol oxidation products (COPs). To determine hydroperoxides, primary products of oxidation and quantify secondary products UV/VIS absorbance spectroscopy was applied. Most of the foods analysed in this study were meat products. In actual fact, lipid oxidation is a major deterioration reaction in meat and meat products and results in adverse changes in the colour, flavour and texture of meat. The development of rancidity has long recognized as a serious problem during meat handling, storage and processing. On a dairy product, a vegetal cream, a study of lipid fraction and development of rancidity during storage was carried out to evaluate its shelf-life and some nutritional features life saturated/unsaturated fatty acids ratio and phytosterols content. Then, according to the interest that has been growing around functional food in the last years, a new electrophoretic method was optimized and compared with HPLC to check the quality of a beehive product like royal jelly. This manuscript reports the main results obtained in the five activities briefly summarized as follows: 1) comparison between HPLC and a new electrophoretic method in the evaluation of authenticity of royal jelly; 2) study of the lipid fraction of a vegetal cream under different storage conditions; 3) study of lipid oxidation in minced beef during storage under a modified atmosphere packaging, before and after cooking; 4) evaluation of the influence of dietary fat and processing on the lipid fraction of chicken patties; 5) study of the lipid fraction of typical Italian and Spanish pork dry sausages and cured hams.
Resumo:
Questo lavoro di tesi è stato suddiviso in tre parti. L’argomento principale è stato lo “Studio della componente antiossidante di oli ottenuti da olive mediante l’utilizzo di diversi sistemi e parametri tecnologici”. E’ ben noto come la qualità ossidativa di un olio di oliva dipenda oltre che dalla sua composizione in acidi grassi, dalla presenza di composti caratterizzati da un elevata attività antiossidante, ovvero le sostanze fenoliche. I composti fenolici contribuiscono quindi in maniera preponderante alla shelf life dell’olio extravergine di oliva. Inoltre sono state riscontrate delle forti correlazione tra alcune di queste sostanze e gli attributi sensoriali positivi di amaro e piccante. E’ poi da sottolineare come il potere antiossidante dei composti fenolici degli oli vergini di oliva, sia stato negli ultimi anni oggetto di considerevole interesse, poiché correlato alla protezione da alcune patologie come ad esempio quelle vascolari, degenerative e tumorali. Il contenuto delle sostanze fenoliche negli oli di oliva dipende da diversi fattori: cultivar, metodo di coltivazione, grado di maturazione delle olive e ovviamente dalle operazioni tecnologiche poiché possono variare il quantitativo di questi composti estratto. Alla luce di quanto appena detto abbiamo valutato l’influenza dei fattori agronomici (metodi di agricoltura biologica, integrata e convenzionale) e tecnologici (riduzione della temperatura della materia prima, aggiunta di coadiuvanti in fase di frangitura e di gramolatura, confronto tra tre oli extravergini di oliva ottenuti mediante diversi sistemi tecnologici) sul contenuto in composti fenolici di oli edibili ottenuti da olive (paper 1-3-4). Oltre alle sostanze fenoliche, negli oli di oliva sono presenti altri composti caratterizzati da proprietà chimiche e nutrizionali, tra questi vi sono i fitosteroli, ovvero gli steroli tipici del mondo vegetale, che rappresentano la frazione dell’insaponificabile quantitativamente più importante dopo gli idrocarburi. La composizione quali-quantitativa degli steroli di un olio di oliva è una delle caratteristiche analitiche più importanti nella valutazione della sua genuinità; infatti la frazione sterolica è significativamente diversa in funzione dell’origine botanica e perciò viene utilizzata per distinguere tra di loro gli oli e le loro miscele. Il principale sterolo nell’olio di oliva è il β- sitosterolo, la presenza di questo composto in quantità inferiore al 90% è un indice approssimativo dell’aggiunta di un qualsiasi altro olio. Il β-sitosterolo è una sostanza importante dal punto di vista della salute, poiché si oppone all’assorbimento del colesterolo. Mentre in letteratura si trovano numerosi lavori relativi al potere antiossidante di una serie di composti presenti nell’olio vergine di oliva (i già citati polifenoli, ma anche carotenoidi e tocoferoli) e ricerche che dimostrano invece come altri composti possano promuovere l’ossidazione dei lipidi, per quanto riguarda il potere antiossidante degli steroli e dei 4- metilsteroli, vi sono ancora poche informazioni. Per questo è stata da noi valutata la composizione sterolica in oli extravergini di oliva ottenuti con diverse tecnologie di estrazione e l’influenza di questa sostanza sulla loro stabilità ossidativa (paper 2). E’ stato recentemente riportato in letteratura come lipidi cellulari evidenziati attraverso la spettroscopia di risonanza nucleare magnetica (NMR) rivestano una importanza strategica da un punto di vista funzionale e metabolico. Questi lipidi, da un lato un lato sono stati associati allo sviluppo di cellule neoplastiche maligne e alla morte cellulare, dall’altro sono risultati anche messaggeri di processi benigni quali l’attivazione e la proliferazione di un normale processo di crescita cellulare. Nell’ambito di questa ricerca è nata una collaborazione tra il Dipartimento di Biochimica “G. Moruzzi” ed il Dipartimento di Scienze degli Alimenti dell’Università di Bologna. Infatti, il gruppo di lipochimica del Dipartimento di Scienze degli Alimenti, a cui fa capo il Prof. Giovanni Lercker, da sempre si occupa dello studio delle frazioni lipidiche, mediante le principali tecniche cromatografiche. L’obiettivo di questa collaborazione è stato quello di caratterizzare la componente lipidica totale estratta dai tessuti renali umani sani e neoplastici, mediante l’utilizzo combinato di diverse tecniche analitiche: la risonanza magnetica nucleare (1H e 13C RMN), la cromatografia su strato sottile (TLC), la cromatografia liquida ad alta prestazione (HPLC) e la gas cromatografia (GC) (paper 5-6-7)
Resumo:
The removal of aromatic hydrocarbons from diesel has received considerable attention after environmental regulations that require petroleum reï¬ners to raise cetane number and to limit aromatics in diesel fuel in order to improve combustion efficiency and reduce particulate and NOx emissions. An alternative is blending with FischerâTropsch (FT) gas-to-liquid diesel fuel; however, this option may not be economically viable solution in case of extensive blend. Another alternative is to incorporate in the diesel pool a greater fraction of the so-called light cycle oil (LCO). Due to its high aromatics content and its low cetane number (typically between 20 and 30), the incorporation of LCO may have a negative impact on the quality of diesel. Current technologies for LCO improvement are based on hydrogenation to adjust both sulphur and cetane number but while an important fraction of the aromatics present in LCO can be saturated in a deep hydrogenation process, the cetane number may still be lower than the target values specified in diesel legislations, so further upgrading is needed. An interesting technology for improving the cetane number of diesels and maintaining meanwhile high diesel yields is achieved by combining a complete hydrogenation process with a selective ring opening (SRO) reaction of the naphthenic rings. The SRO can be defined as naphthene ring-opening to form compounds with high cetane number, but without any carbon losses. Controlling the interconversion of six- and five- membered rings via an acid-catalyzed ring-contraction step is also of great importance, since selective conversion of six-membered to five-membered naphthene rings greatly inï¬uences ring-opening rates and selectivity. High intrinsic activity may be enhanced by deposition of noble metals on acidic, high surface area supports, because it is possible to arrange close proximity of the metal and acid sites. Moreover, in large-pore supports, the diffusion resistance of liquid reactants into the pores is minimized. In addition to metal centres, the acid sites of support also plays role in aromatics hydrogenation. However, the functions of different kinds of acid sites (Brønsted vs. Lewis acidity), and their optimal concentrations and strengths, remain unclear. In the present study we investigated the upgrading of an aromatic-rich feedstock over different type of metal supported on mesoporous silica-alumina. The selective hydrogenolysis and ring opening of tetrahydronaphthalene (THN or tetralin) was carried out as representative of LCO fractions after deep hydrogenation process. In this regards the aim of this study is to evaluate both the effect of metals and that of the supports characterized by different acid distribution and strength, on conversion and selectivity. For this purpose a series of catalysts were prepared by impregnation. The catalysts were characterized and conversion tests of THN were performed in a lab-scale plant operating in the pressure range from 7.0-5.0 MPa and in the temperature range from 300 to 360°C.
Resumo:
The main objective of this thesis was the chemical characterization of synthetic secondary organic aerosol (SOA) produced from atmospherically relevant anthropogenic and biogenic VOCs during reaction chamber experiments. In parallel, the resulting chemical features of these laboratory-SOA were used to interpret the composition of ambient samples of atmospheric fine particulate matter collected at several sites in Europe, in order to determine the fraction of ambient aerosol organic mass accounted for by biogenic and anthropogenic SOA.
Resumo:
Atmospheric aerosol particles directly impact air quality and participate in controlling the climate system. Organic Aerosol (OA) in general accounts for a large fraction (10–90%) of the global submicron (PM1) particulate mass. Chemometric methods for source identification are used in many disciplines, but methods relying on the analysis of NMR datasets are rarely used in atmospheric sciences. This thesis provides an original application of NMR-based chemometric methods to atmospheric OA source apportionment. The method was tested on chemical composition databases obtained from samples collected at different environments in Europe, hence exploring the impact of a great diversity of natural and anthropogenic sources. We focused on sources of water-soluble OA (WSOA), for which NMR analysis provides substantial advantages compared to alternative methods. Different factor analysis techniques are applied independently to NMR datasets from nine field campaigns of the project EUCAARI and allowed the identification of recurrent source contributions to WSOA in European background troposphere: 1) Marine SOA; 2) Aliphatic amines from ground sources (agricultural activities, etc.); 3) Biomass burning POA; 4) Biogenic SOA from terpene oxidation; 5) “Aged” SOAs, including humic-like substances (HULIS); 6) Other factors possibly including contributions from Primary Biological Aerosol Particles, and products of cooking activities. Biomass burning POA accounted for more than 50% of WSOC in winter months. Aged SOA associated with HULIS was predominant (> 75%) during the spring-summer, suggesting that secondary sources and transboundary transport become more important in spring and summer. Complex aerosol measurements carried out, involving several foreign research groups, provided the opportunity to compare source apportionment results obtained by NMR analysis with those provided by more widespread Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometers (AMS) techniques that now provided categorization schemes of OA which are becoming a standard for atmospheric chemists. Results emerging from this thesis partly confirm AMS classification and partly challenge it.
Resumo:
Redshift Space Distortions (RSD) are an apparent anisotropy in the distribution of galaxies due to their peculiar motion. These features are imprinted in the correlation function of galaxies, which describes how these structures distribute around each other. RSD can be represented by a distortions parameter $\beta$, which is strictly related to the growth of cosmic structures. For this reason, measurements of RSD can be exploited to give constraints on the cosmological parameters, such us for example the neutrino mass. Neutrinos are neutral subatomic particles that come with three flavours, the electron, the muon and the tau neutrino. Their mass differences can be measured in the oscillation experiments. Information on the absolute scale of neutrino mass can come from cosmology, since neutrinos leave a characteristic imprint on the large scale structure of the universe. The aim of this thesis is to provide constraints on the accuracy with which neutrino mass can be estimated when expoiting measurements of RSD. In particular we want to describe how the error on the neutrino mass estimate depends on three fundamental parameters of a galaxy redshift survey: the density of the catalogue, the bias of the sample considered and the volume observed. In doing this we make use of the BASICC Simulation from which we extract a series of dark matter halo catalogues, characterized by different value of bias, density and volume. This mock data are analysed via a Markov Chain Monte Carlo procedure, in order to estimate the neutrino mass fraction, using the software package CosmoMC, which has been conveniently modified. In this way we are able to extract a fitting formula describing our measurements, which can be used to forecast the precision reachable in future surveys like Euclid, using this kind of observations.