Food and Beverage Application Notes

Displaying  13  of 73 Food and Beverage application notes
Reference Title and Description
203-821-561 Introduction to Simply GCxGC

An Online Guide for Optimizing Comprehensive Two Dimensional GC Separations

203-821-560 Quantitation and Non-Target Detection of Pesticides in Spinach Extract with Pegasus BT4D

203-821-590 Beer Aging at Storage Temperatures

Correlation of Chemical and Sensory Data to Track Aging of an American IPA Beer at Different Storage Temperatures

203-821-579 Differentiation of Honey Aroma Profiles with Flux GCxGC-TOFMS

203-821-569 StayClean Ion Source Stability

203-821-529 Tasting Jelly Beans using HS-SPME Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry

203-821-536 Discovering the Scent of Celery

203-821-519 Rapid Screening for Contact Allergens in Perfumes with Pegasus BT GC-TOFMS

203-821-525 Analysis of Fats in Food Products with GC-TOFMS

Reporting the fat content of food on packaging material is required for many products. For this reason, the ability to detect and distinguish different types of fats is important. The AOAC has an official method, Method 996.06, for the detection of fats (total, saturated, and unsaturated) that uses GC paired with FID to separate fatty acids, derivatized with methylation.

203-821-477 Differential Analysis of Olive Oils with Pegasus GC-HRT and ChromaTOF-HRT Reference Feature

203-821-359 Moisture and Ash Determination in Flour TGA701

203-821-247 GCxGC-ECD of Organochlorine Pesticides in Cucumber and Tomato

203-821-408 Analysis of Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs) in Fish Oil Supplements by Gas Chromatography with High-Performance Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometry

The American Heart Association recommends eating two servings of fish per week, specifically fish with high fat content such as tuna and salmon. In this study, the advantages of using the Pegasus GC-HRT to analyze complex matrices such as fish oil are highlighted.