Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.

Coffee is currently the second largest commodity on the world market today, and there is great concern about the quality of the beans exported from producer countries to Europe and USA. Practices such as using blends of different species and adding low-cost raw materials, such as chicory, corn, and soybean, impair the sensory and functional characteristics of the drink made from roasted and ground coffee beans. There is a need to adopt more efficient analytical methods than the microscopy technique currently used. The first chromatographic method used to determine fraud was reported in 1958. This method used paper chromatography to differentiate between coffee and chicory based on the free reducing sugars. As of the 1980s, different methods involving high-performance liquid chromatography and gas chromatography were developed in order to demonstrate geographic authenticity, distinction between species, occurrence of adulteration, and the presence of defective beans by determining the monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, tocopherols, fatty acids, volatiles, diterpenes, sterols, and phenolic substances, among others. As far as the authors know, there are no papers published in the literature that have compiled such an extensive set of information about these chromatographic methods as here. Over the last 2 years, there has been a trend to develop analytical methods for ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry to confirm fraud in coffee, due to high sensitivity and selectivity.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: MARTINS, V. de C., GODOY, R. L. de O., GOVÊA, A. C. M. S., SANTIAGO, M. C. P. de A., BORGUINI, R. G., BRAGA, E. C. de O., PACHECO, S., NASCIMENTO, L. da S. de M. do
Other Authors: Víctor de Carvalho Martins, UFRJ
Format: Separatas biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2018-06-25
Subjects:Café, Grão, Carboidrato, Cromatografia, Método de Análise, Cromatografia Gasosa, Adulteração, Coffee (beverage), Carbohydrates, Volatile compounds, Coffee beans, Analytical methods, Ultra-performance liquid chromatography, Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, Adulterated products,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1092721
https://doi.org/10.1093/fqsafe/fyy017
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-alice-doc-1092721
record_format koha
spelling dig-alice-doc-10927212018-06-26T01:03:19Z Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography. MARTINS, V. de C. GODOY, R. L. de O. GOVÊA, A. C. M. S. SANTIAGO, M. C. P. de A. BORGUINI, R. G. BRAGA, E. C. de O. PACHECO, S. NASCIMENTO, L. da S. de M. do Víctor de Carvalho Martins, UFRJ MANUELA CRISTINA P DE A SANTIAGO, CTAA RENATA GALHARDO BORGUINI, CTAA LUZIMAR DA SILVA DE M DO NASCIMENTO, CTAA. SIDNEY PACHECO, CTAA Ana Cristina Miranda Senna Gouvêa, CTAA Elaine Cristina de Oliveira Braga, UFRJ RONOEL LUIZ DE OLIVEIRA GODOY, CTAA Café Grão Carboidrato Cromatografia Método de Análise Cromatografia Gasosa Adulteração Coffee (beverage) Carbohydrates Volatile compounds Coffee beans Analytical methods Ultra-performance liquid chromatography Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry Adulterated products Coffee is currently the second largest commodity on the world market today, and there is great concern about the quality of the beans exported from producer countries to Europe and USA. Practices such as using blends of different species and adding low-cost raw materials, such as chicory, corn, and soybean, impair the sensory and functional characteristics of the drink made from roasted and ground coffee beans. There is a need to adopt more efficient analytical methods than the microscopy technique currently used. The first chromatographic method used to determine fraud was reported in 1958. This method used paper chromatography to differentiate between coffee and chicory based on the free reducing sugars. As of the 1980s, different methods involving high-performance liquid chromatography and gas chromatography were developed in order to demonstrate geographic authenticity, distinction between species, occurrence of adulteration, and the presence of defective beans by determining the monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, tocopherols, fatty acids, volatiles, diterpenes, sterols, and phenolic substances, among others. As far as the authors know, there are no papers published in the literature that have compiled such an extensive set of information about these chromatographic methods as here. Over the last 2 years, there has been a trend to develop analytical methods for ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry to confirm fraud in coffee, due to high sensitivity and selectivity. Review. 2018-06-26T01:03:12Z 2018-06-26T01:03:12Z 2018-06-25 2018 2019-02-06T11:11:11Z Separatas Food Quality and Safety, Oxford, v. 20, p 1-13, 2018. http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1092721 https://doi.org/10.1093/fqsafe/fyy017 en eng openAccess
institution EMBRAPA
collection DSpace
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-alice
tag biblioteca
region America del Sur
libraryname Sistema de bibliotecas de EMBRAPA
language English
eng
topic Café
Grão
Carboidrato
Cromatografia
Método de Análise
Cromatografia Gasosa
Adulteração
Coffee (beverage)
Carbohydrates
Volatile compounds
Coffee beans
Analytical methods
Ultra-performance liquid chromatography
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Adulterated products
Café
Grão
Carboidrato
Cromatografia
Método de Análise
Cromatografia Gasosa
Adulteração
Coffee (beverage)
Carbohydrates
Volatile compounds
Coffee beans
Analytical methods
Ultra-performance liquid chromatography
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Adulterated products
spellingShingle Café
Grão
Carboidrato
Cromatografia
Método de Análise
Cromatografia Gasosa
Adulteração
Coffee (beverage)
Carbohydrates
Volatile compounds
Coffee beans
Analytical methods
Ultra-performance liquid chromatography
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Adulterated products
Café
Grão
Carboidrato
Cromatografia
Método de Análise
Cromatografia Gasosa
Adulteração
Coffee (beverage)
Carbohydrates
Volatile compounds
Coffee beans
Analytical methods
Ultra-performance liquid chromatography
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Adulterated products
MARTINS, V. de C.
GODOY, R. L. de O.
GOVÊA, A. C. M. S.
SANTIAGO, M. C. P. de A.
BORGUINI, R. G.
BRAGA, E. C. de O.
PACHECO, S.
NASCIMENTO, L. da S. de M. do
Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
description Coffee is currently the second largest commodity on the world market today, and there is great concern about the quality of the beans exported from producer countries to Europe and USA. Practices such as using blends of different species and adding low-cost raw materials, such as chicory, corn, and soybean, impair the sensory and functional characteristics of the drink made from roasted and ground coffee beans. There is a need to adopt more efficient analytical methods than the microscopy technique currently used. The first chromatographic method used to determine fraud was reported in 1958. This method used paper chromatography to differentiate between coffee and chicory based on the free reducing sugars. As of the 1980s, different methods involving high-performance liquid chromatography and gas chromatography were developed in order to demonstrate geographic authenticity, distinction between species, occurrence of adulteration, and the presence of defective beans by determining the monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, tocopherols, fatty acids, volatiles, diterpenes, sterols, and phenolic substances, among others. As far as the authors know, there are no papers published in the literature that have compiled such an extensive set of information about these chromatographic methods as here. Over the last 2 years, there has been a trend to develop analytical methods for ultra-performance liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry to confirm fraud in coffee, due to high sensitivity and selectivity.
author2 Víctor de Carvalho Martins, UFRJ
author_facet Víctor de Carvalho Martins, UFRJ
MARTINS, V. de C.
GODOY, R. L. de O.
GOVÊA, A. C. M. S.
SANTIAGO, M. C. P. de A.
BORGUINI, R. G.
BRAGA, E. C. de O.
PACHECO, S.
NASCIMENTO, L. da S. de M. do
format Separatas
topic_facet Café
Grão
Carboidrato
Cromatografia
Método de Análise
Cromatografia Gasosa
Adulteração
Coffee (beverage)
Carbohydrates
Volatile compounds
Coffee beans
Analytical methods
Ultra-performance liquid chromatography
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
Adulterated products
author MARTINS, V. de C.
GODOY, R. L. de O.
GOVÊA, A. C. M. S.
SANTIAGO, M. C. P. de A.
BORGUINI, R. G.
BRAGA, E. C. de O.
PACHECO, S.
NASCIMENTO, L. da S. de M. do
author_sort MARTINS, V. de C.
title Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
title_short Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
title_full Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
title_fullStr Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
title_full_unstemmed Fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
title_sort fraud investigation in commercial coffee by chromatography.
publishDate 2018-06-25
url http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1092721
https://doi.org/10.1093/fqsafe/fyy017
work_keys_str_mv AT martinsvdec fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT godoyrldeo fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT goveaacms fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT santiagomcpdea fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT borguinirg fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT bragaecdeo fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT pachecos fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
AT nascimentoldasdemdo fraudinvestigationincommercialcoffeebychromatography
_version_ 1756024812694667264