AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Antioxidants. Oxidation of food Oxidation reactions can occur when food is exposed to oxygen in the air. Foods containing fats or oils are at the greatest.
Advertisements

Lipid Oxidation The overall mechanism of lipid oxidation consists of three phases: (1) initiation, the formation of free radicals; (2) propagation, the.
Fats & Oils AL Chemistry p. 1 Structure & Properties Hydrolysis of Fats & Oils Iodine Value Hardening of Vegetable Oil Hydrolytic & Oxidative Rancidity.
Barbara Bielska Ph.D. MirOil Bernard Friedman Allentown, USA August 30, 2006 A New Frying System with fryliquid TM A program to protect the composition.
The oil and fat products used for edible purposes can be divided into two distinct classes: -liquid oils, such as olive oil, peanut oil, soybean oil, or.
Ripan Goswami. Shallow frying is cooking process in highly heated oil, promoting browning of battered or non battered foods Deep Fat frying is a cooking.
© Food – a fact of life 2009 Fat and its functional properties in food products Extension/Foundation DRAFT ONLY.
Enzymatic Hydrolysis Hydrolases - ubiquitous presence of hydrolases in foodstuffs - extremely important mechanism of introducing sensory alteration in.
PREDICTING SHELF LIFE IN FOODS THROUGH OXIDATIVE STABILITY LINDSAY WARD APRIL 9, 2015.
BTC PTEC Biodiesel Workshop August 7 – 8, 2006 Session 2 – Chemical Background.
Medical Biochemistry (2) Level 2 Part V (Lipids)
LIPIDS L2 BIOLOGY.
The concern with n-3 Lipid Oxidation Alexandria B. Marciante Dr. Steve Talcott.
Food chemistry  Prof. Dr. Fahim Shaltout. Fats and other lipids  Lipids are one of large groups of organic compounds which are of great importance in.
Lipids Lipids are diverse in form and are defined by solubility in non-polar solvents (and insolubility in water) Lipids are used for efficient energy.
Lipids & Functions Tri- glycerides Saturated & UnSat.
LIPID CHEMISTRY. LIPID OF BIOLOGICAL IMPORTANCE Definition: Lipids are organic compounds, which have the following common properties: 1- They are esters.
1 Chapter 6 Lipids 6.4 Waxes, Fats, and Oils Copyright © 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings.
Lipids
Medical chemistry (2) Part II (Lipids) week 4 lectures “Important reactions of lipids” Taif University College of Medicine Preparatory Year Students.
Unit Food Science. Problem Area Handling and Storing Plant Products.
Who’d want to spend life on a shelf anyway?. Try this first…
Auto oxidation of unsaturated lipids in emulsions
Biomacromolecules Part 1: Lipids. Biomacromolecules Biomacromolecules are BIG molecules. They play an essential role in both the structure and functions.
Fat/Lipids –Second most abundant component (after water) in meat --- by far the most variable –composed of: 1.) neutral lipids (triglyceride) ~ 99% of.
CHAPTER I.  Nutrition is an organic substance needed for normal functioning of the organism's body system, growth, health maintenance.  Nutrients obtained.
Antioxidants BHA BHT TBHQ Propyl Gallate Ascorbic Acid.
Lipids. LIPIDS Lipids are a large and diverse group of naturally occurring organic compounds that are related by their solubility in nonpolar organic.
LIPIDS. A water insoluble compounds, but soluble in ether, benzena, acetone and chloroform Consists of glicerol & 3 fatty acids. Forms: solid lipid liquid.
Hydrogenation Treatment of an oil with hydrogen and a suitable catalyst to decrease the number of double bonds and increase the degree of saturation.
CH 8: Lipids.
 Also called fat – are a family of chemical compounds that are a main part of every living cell.
Lipids The term Lipid applies to a class of compounds that are soluble in organic solvent and nearly in soluble in water. Chemically:
Maillard Reaction.
Chapter 10. The Glycerides: Monoglycerides Diglycerides Triglycerides Phospholipids Sterols Lipids are a category of organic compounds that are insoluble.
Reactions of Oils and Fats
BIOMOLECULES. What’s the difference??  The study of compounds that contain bonds between carbon atoms  The study of all other compounds Organic ChemistryInorganic.
AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS
Chapter 7. Heat processing using hot oils (Frying) By: M.Sc. Mohammed Sabah 1.
Stability Measuring Instruments
ROZILA BT MOHAMAD MASTURA BT KHAIRUDDIN NUR ERZA FAREEHA BT SARBRI HANIS NABILLAH BT MIZAN Noor FAZRIEYANA BT HAMIDON
Lipids Copyright © 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc.
AUTOXIDATION OF OILS AND FATS
Reactive Oxygen Species in Foods
SHELF LIFE Hande Türkçapar 12-C.
LIPIDS What Is a Lipid? A lipid is a fat-soluble molecule. To put it another way, lipids are insoluble in water but soluble in at least one organic solvent.
Triglycerides Are Esters of Glycerol and Fatty Acids
17.4 Chemical Properties of Triacylglycerols
Fat and its functional properties in food products.
+ + +.
FATS and OILS Gülce Güngör 12-C.
BIOLOGICAL MOLECULES BZ 002 Prof. Silvia Díaz.
Carbon is the Main Ingredient of Organic Molecules
Types of food additives
Chapter IV (III part) Atmospheric oxidation Randicity
LIPIDS.
بيوشيمي عمومي LIPIDS 1.
More reduced – more H Can be more oxidized – store more energy
Chapter 7 Lipids.
Food Science Experiments for Highschool Sciences
Lipids: Fats & Oils.
Organic Chemistry.
Bioorganic Lipids 4/6/2019 Dr Seemal Jelani Chem-160.
An Additional Energy Source During Exercise
WHAT ARE LIPIDS? Principles of Food Science, Glencoe, Janet Ward.
LIPIDS.
LIPIDS.
Critical evaluation of thermal and non-thermal accelerated lipid oxidation in fish oil Main goal Today saturated fatty acids are increasingly replaced.
3.2 OXIDATION OF OIL/FAT Lipid oxidation is one of the major causes of food spoilage. In edible oils and fat-containing foods, it leads to the development.
Bioorganic Lipids 12/5/2019 Dr Seemal Jelani Chem-160.
Presentation transcript:

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS OBJECTIVES 1. Autoxidation and thermal destruction of lipids; 2. Mechanism and major consequences; 3. How to prevent oxidation of lipids; 4. Frying processes.

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 1 Lipids – major changes during thermal treatment or storage 1. Lipolysis (hydrolysis of acylglycerols) 1.1. Enzymatic – at lower temperature: both – desired and non-desired as process; phospholipases – responsible for lowering the quality in low-temperature fish storage; 1.2. Chemical – thermal treatments and presence of water; during frying, roasting, baking – lowers the lipids stability (easier oxidation of free fatty acids).

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 2 2. Autoxidation and thermal destruction - one of the major factor for food deterioration – obtaining of off-flavor, lowering the nutritional value; some oxidation products have toxicity; - in some cases the controlled oxidation processes are desired – obtaining of some cheese types, fried products etc.

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 3 Mechanism

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 4 Mechanism – typical free radical reaction

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 5 Mechanism – formation of singlet oxygen RH + О2 – the reaction has high activating energy (146kJ/mol); To take place it is necessary presence of catalyst – hydro peroxides, metal cations, photosensitizing by presence of pigments, thermal catalysis. or presence of singlet oxygen

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 6 Mechanism – formation of singlet oxygen 92 kJ 155 kJ

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 7 Mechanism

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 8 Hydro peroxides formation 1. By unsaturated fatty acids

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 9 Hydro peroxides formation 2. By saturated fatty acids – formation of methyl ketones (rancid odor); possible attacks are α-, β-, γ- places. β-oxydation hydro peroxides - СО2

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 10 Decomposition of the hydro peroxides Homolytic cleavage

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 11 Decomposition of the hydro peroxides Heterolytic cleavage

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 12 Decomposition of the hydro peroxides

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 13 Decomposition of the aldehydes obtained – they could participate in oxidation reactions, in the Maillard reaction, reactions of cyclization etc. Reaction of cyclization The unsaturated aldehydes participate more actively in decomposition reactions The malonaldehyde formed is in the base of the ТВА method for measuring the lipid oxidation

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 14 Cholesterol oxidation – lead to formation of cytotoxic and carcinogenic products; found in dried eggs, meat, fried foods. Acrolein formation Dehydration and ester bond cleavage dehydration CH2 = CH – CHO acrolein

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 15 Polymerization reactions – increase of viscosity, lowering the iodine value 1). Diels-Alder reaction Linoleic acid – dimerization 2

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 16 Polymerization reactions – increase of viscosity, lowering the iodine value 1). Diels-Alder reaction Acylglycerols – intramolecular and intermolecular di-(poly-)merization

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 17 Polymerization reactions – increase of viscosity, lowering the iodine value 2). Radical recombination

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 18 Polymerization reactions – increase of viscosity, lowering the iodine value 3). Attack of free radical on a double bonds 4). Oxygen bridges formation – polymerization Polymerization of acylglycerols

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 19 Factors influencing the lipid oxidation 1). Type of fatty acids – unsaturated > saturated; cis > trans; arachidonic: linolenic : linoleic : oleic = 40:20:10:1 2). State of the fatty acids – non-bound > acylglycerols (free fatty acids – could react with metals from the packings - catalysis); 3). Oxygen presence 4). Temperature 5). Physical state of the product; presence of emulsions, porosity, surface 6). аw – 0.3 is the minimum 7). Presence of other substances – prooxidants, antioxidants

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 20 Methods for measuring the lipid oxidation 1). Peroxide value 2). TBA (thiobarbituric acid) test – measures the malonic aldehyde formed 3). Iodine value 4). Chromatography methods 5). Sensory

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 21 3. Antioxidants BHA - Butylated hydroxyanisole BHT - Butylated hydroxytoluene TBHQ - tert-Butylhydroquinone PG – propyl gallate α-tocopherol

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 22 3. Antioxidants – mechanism of action

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 23 4. Chemistry of frying – formation of volatile compounds (aldehydes, ketones, lactones, alcohols, acids, esters); moderately volatile compounds; dimers, polymers; free fatty acids. What is going on with the food during the frying process? 1). Dehydration of the foodstuffs – the water contacting the hot oil is evaporated and the actual process is a steam distillation of the volatile components of the foods; The water from the foodstuffs increases the lipolysis; The water layer formed on the surface of the oil (before its evaporation) to a certain extent inhibits penetration of О2 inside the oil thus slowing down thermal-oxidative destruction; 2). Formation of flavor – diverse and great number of derivatives (heterocyclic – pyrazines, pyridines, thiazoles etc.) 3). The food absorbs part of the oil – in this way part of destruction products enters into the foodstuffs (for French fries – 35% oil absorption); 4). Into the frying oil enter part of the products formed during thermal heating of the foods – lowering with time the stability of the frying oils.

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 28

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 24 What is going on with the food during the frying process?

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 25 What is going on with the food during the frying process? Parameters – temperature, duration, oxygen access (surface), presence of metal cations, presence of antioxidants, extent of oil usage. Tests for frying oil quality 1). Substances insoluble in hexane (used in Germany) - less than 1% 2). Determination of esters-dimers (GC) 3). Changes in dielectric constant – physical method 4). Quick tests – chemical (Oxifrit, Fritest, etc.)

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 26 What is going on with the food during the frying process? Control and safety measurements 1). Choice of suitable and qualitative frying oil – smoke point (sunflower oil: semirefined – 227 -232ºС; unrefined – 107 ºС

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 28 Inherent stability of oils used for frying The higher the inherent stability, the less suitable the oil is for deep frying. Inherent stability calculated from decimal fraction of fatty acids multiplied by relative reaction rates with oxygen, assuming rate for oleic acid = 1 , linoleic acid = 10, and linolenic acid = 25

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 28 The stability of frying oils and fats is usually measured by an accelerated test known as the active oxygen method (AOM). In this test, air is bubbled through an oil sample maintained at 95°C and the peroxide value is measured at intervals. At the end point the peroxide value shows a sharp increase, and this represents the AOM value in hours. Typical AOM values for liquid seed oils range from 10 to 30 hours; heavy-duty frying shortenings range from 200 to 300 hours. Active Oxygen Method (AOM) Time of Several Oils and Fats as Determined by Peroxide Value and Conductivity Measurements from J.M. deMan, et al., Formation of Short Chain Volatile Organic Acids in the Automated AOM Method, J.A.O.C.S., Vol. 64, p. 996, © 1987, American Oil Chemists' Society.

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS ! AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 27 What is going on with the food during the frying process? 2). Choice of suitable equipment 3). Choice of suitable temperature according to the product and the oil used 4). Filtration of the frying oil – removal of residues from the foodstuffs 5). Change of the frying oil – after testing 6). Addition of antioxidants

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 28 Summery of the autoxidation and thermal-oxidative destruction 1. Lipid oxidation is not a single process that proceeds according to a strict sequence. Rather, numerous events take place in different regions of the food matrix. The different reactions usually occur with considerable overlap, and the rate of each may vary depending on conditions in each region. 2. The “conditions” in each region (oxidation parameters) are not static. They change continuously. 3. In food, oxidation involves oxidizable lipid substrates differing in composition, chemical and physical properties, and in their sensitivity to oxidation (fatty acids, mixtures of acylglycerols, phospholipids). 4. The lipid substrates coexist in proximity with various other nonlipid, major (proteins, carbohydrates, water) and minor (trace metals, vitamins, enzymes, pro- and antioxidants) components. A multitude of interactions take place.

AUTOXIDATION AND THERMAL-OXIDATIVE DESTRUCTION OF LIPIDS 28 Summery of the autoxidation and thermal-oxidative destruction 5. Nearly all oxidative events are not “strictly chemical.” Instead, they are largely dictated by the physical state of both substrate and medium. 6. The minor components play a major role in a critical, delicate oxidative-antioxidative balance, the mechanism of which is not fully understood. 7. The same inhibitors (or accelerators) may play opposite roles depending on the oxidative event being considered. For example, a phenolic antioxidant may block the formation of volatile oxidation products while enhancing the accumulation of peroxides.