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- Title
Isotopic and Elemental Authenticity Markers: a Case Study on Cypriot Wines.
- Authors
Kokkinofta, Rebecca; Fotakis, Charalambos; Zervou, Maria; Zoumpoulakis, Panagiotis; Savvidou, Chara; Poulli, Konstantina; Louka, Charalambos; Economidou, Naso; Tzioni, Eleni; Damianou, Katerina; Loupasaki, Sofia; Kefalas, Panagiotis
- Abstract
This study monitors variations in isotopes and elements in relation to grape variety, environmental factors and provenance in order to address the wine authenticity issue. Inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES) assessed the wines' elemental content. Site-specific nuclear isotope fractionation-nuclear magnetic resonance and isotope ratio mass spectrometry methodologies determined in authentic and commercial wines the distribution of the naturally occurring stable isotopes of the deuterium/hydrogen (D/H) ratios and carbon (C/C) in ethanol of wine and oxygen ratio (O/O) in wine water. Chemometrics delineated the elements and isotopes responsible for wine classification. Specifically, unsupervised principal component analysis (PCA) framed the importance of grape variety and provenance, while supervised analysis pinpointed the vineyard effect and highlighted the contribution of the vintage year. Validation steps ensured that the extracted models do not predict randomly and their results are reliable. In fact, the acquired results can be incorporated to the EU Wine Isotopic Databank database providing both a guide and a tool for eventual candidatures for denomination of origin and support both Cypriot wine and winemakers. In this context, this research contributes to authenticity assurance of wines and adds value to final products, while it helps controlling hazards arising from environmental changes.
- Publication
Food Analytical Methods, 2017, Vol 10, Issue 12, p3902
- ISSN
1936-9751
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s12161-017-0959-2