Multielemental Analysis of Various Kinds of Whisky

Molecules. 2019 Mar 27;24(7):1193. doi: 10.3390/molecules24071193.

Abstract

Whisky (whiskey) consists of many trace elements coming from the raw materials used in its fermentation, distillation and maturation processes. These ingredients assure the exceptional organoleptic characteristics of the beverage. Their analysis is important to better control the stages of fermentation, distillation, taste repeatability and for product quality assurance as well as from the brand protection point of view. This article presents the usefulness of modern analytical techniques based on elemental analysis. ICP mass spectrometry and CV atomic absorption spectroscopy were applied to distinguish whisky produced in Scotland from whisky coming from Ireland and the United States. The collected semi-quantitative data were used for multivariate analysis performed using the Statistica 10.0 software. The results showed that Irish whiskey is characterized by quite a high amount of Ba and Ti compared with other samples, which made it possible to distinguish this sample from the others. No strict correlation was found between the type of whisky and the amount of trace elements, however, the projection of objects on the first two components revealed that single malt samples created one cluster.

Keywords: ICP-MS; PCA; chemometric analysis; mercury analyzer; multielemental analysis; whisky.

MeSH terms

  • Alcoholic Beverages / analysis*
  • Data Interpretation, Statistical
  • Mass Spectrometry
  • Multivariate Analysis