scholarly journals Determination of Volatile Compounds on Traditional Fermentation of Chao Teri

2021 ◽  
Vol 819 (1) ◽  
pp. 012011
Author(s):  
Syahriati ◽  
UA Nur Fitriani ◽  
Muhammad Yusuf
2011 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1081-1085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisabeta Chirila ◽  
Simona Dobrinas ◽  
Elena Paunescu ◽  
Gabriela Stanciu ◽  
Camelia Draghici

Author(s):  
Gabriela F. Giordano ◽  
Vitoria M. S. Freitas ◽  
Gabriel R. Schleder ◽  
Murilo Santhiago ◽  
Angelo L. Gobbi ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandr Ya Yashin ◽  
Boris V. Nemzer ◽  
Emilie Combet ◽  
Yakov I. Yashin

<p>Despite the fact that mankind has been drinking tea for more than 5000 years, its chemical composition has been studied only in recent decades. These studies are primarily carried out using chromatographic methods. This review summarizes the latest information regarding the chemical composition of different tea grades by different chromatographic methods, which has not previously been reviewed in the same scope. Over the last 40 years, the qualitative and quantitative analyses of high volatile compounds were determined by GC and GC/MS. The main components responsible for aroma of green and black tea were revealed, and the low volatile compounds basically were determined by HPLC and LC/MS methods. Most studies focusing on the determination of catechins and caffeine in various teas (green, oolong, black and pu-erh) involved HPLC analysis.</p> <p>Knowledge of tea chemical composition helps in assessing its quality on the one hand, and helps to monitor and manage its growing, processing, and storage conditions on the other. In particular, this knowledge has enabled to establish the relationships between the chemical composition of tea and its properties by identifying the tea constituents which determine its aroma and taste. Therefore, assessment of tea quality does not only rely on subjective organoleptic evaluation, but also on objective physical and chemical methods, with extra determination of tea components most beneficial to human health. With this knowledge, the nutritional value of tea may be increased, and tea quality improved by providing via optimization of the growing, processing, and storage conditions.</p>


1962 ◽  
Vol 16 ◽  
pp. 1289-1290 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger Bonnichsen ◽  
Maire Linturi ◽  
Anne-Marie Olson ◽  
T. Briggs ◽  
G. A. D. Haslewood ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
G. Neurath ◽  
H. Ehmke ◽  
H. Schneemann

AbstractThe present paper gives a balance of total water (comprising moisture content of tobacco as well as water of combustion) in the smoking of a plain cigarette without filter under standard conditions. 62.8 % of the hydrogen originally present in the burnt portion of the cigarette are transformed into water. The sidestream smoke is enriched by the total water to a large extent, i.e., in proportion to the total water of a cigarette, 14.4 mg of water are calculated to be transferred to the mainstream smoke and 344.7 mg to the sidestream smoke and to the ashes. 14.6 % of the said hydrogen are found to be delivered into the condensates of main and sidestream smoke in the form of slightly volatile compounds containing hydrogen. The residual 22.6 % are transferred into the gas-vapour phase in the form of volatile compounds. The interpretation of temperature measurements made along the axis of and in the space above a freely smouldering cigarette (without drawing) as well as the determination of the velocity (33 cm/sec) of the escaping sidestream smoke indicate the presence of a rapid and steep convection stream over the glowing zone. This finding accounts for the large water enrichment of the sidestream smoke and for the fact that water formed by the combustion process does not contribute to the transfer of steam-volatile substances into the sidestream smoke.


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