Determination of sulfur dioxide in wine using a quartz crystal microbalance

Anal Chem. 1996 May 1;68(9):1561-4. doi: 10.1021/ac9510548.

Abstract

A new method for the analysis of both total and bound SO(2) in wine is proposed, based on a quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), and it is compared with the widely used Ripper method. The proposed method is faster than the Ripper's, and the instrumentation is either home-made or widely available. When both methods are applied to the same sample, the results obtained using the QCM method are bracketed in an interval less than one-tenth the size of that obtained using the Ripper method. Although the SO(2) concentrations found using the QCM method correlate well with the ones obtained with the Ripper method, the results are systematically higher, which can be explained as due to the absence of interferences known to affect the Ripper method.