Premium
Formation and decomposition of stigmasterol hydroperoxides and secondary oxidation products during thermo‐oxidation
Author(s) -
Kemmo Suvi,
Soupas Laura,
Lampi AnnaMaija,
Piironen Vieno
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
european journal of lipid science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.614
H-Index - 94
eISSN - 1438-9312
pISSN - 1438-7697
DOI - 10.1002/ejlt.200401112
Subject(s) - chemistry , radical , stigmasterol , decomposition , high performance liquid chromatography , lipid oxidation , photochemistry , organic chemistry , chromatography , antioxidant
The oxidation mechanisms of stigmasterol at 100 and 180 °C were investigated by using the HPLC‐UV‐FL method. An overall picture of the oxidation status was achieved with a single HPLC analysis, enabling us to monitor the formation and decomposition of both primary and secondary oxidation products. The oxidation behavior of stigmasterol was different at the two temperatures. At 180 °C, the amounts of hydroperoxides increased sharply during the first 10 min and then began to decrease. At 100 °C, the amounts of hydroperoxides increased over the entire experimental period. At 180 °C, all major secondary oxidation products, except 7‐ketostigmasterol, reached a plateau after 40 min of oxidation, while at 100 °C their amounts increased constantly. The same oxidation products were formed at both temperatures, but their distribution differed. At 180 °C, the formation of free radicals at position 7 was more favorable than formation of radicals at position 25. The situation was the opposite at 100 °C; radicals formed more easily at the tertiary position 25. At 180 °C, 7‐ketostigmasterol was dominant after 40 min of oxidation, whereas at 100 °C it was the main oxidation product over the entire experiment.