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Comparison of Carbon Isotope Ratio Measurement of the Vanillin Methoxy Group by GC-IRMS and 13 C-qNMR.

Markus GreulePhuong Mai LeJuris MeijaZoltan MesterFrank Keppler
Published in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2023)
Site-specific carbon isotope ratio measurements by quantitative 13 C NMR ( 13 C-qNMR), Orbitrap-MS, and GC-IRMS offer a new dimension to conventional bulk carbon isotope ratio measurements used in food provenance, forensics, and a number of other applications. While the site-specific measurements of carbon isotope ratios in vanillin by 13 C-qNMR or Orbitrap-MS are powerful new tools in food analysis, there are a limited number of studies regarding the validity of these measurement results. Here we present carbon site-specific measurements of vanillin by GC-IRMS and 13 C-qNMR for methoxy carbon. Carbon isotope delta (δ 13 C) values obtained by these different measurement approaches demonstrate remarkable agreement; in five vanillin samples whose bulk δ 13 C values ranged from -31‰ to -26‰, their δ 13 C values of the methoxy carbon ranged from -62.4‰ to -30.6‰, yet the difference between the results of the two analytical approaches was within ±0.6‰. While the GC-IRMS approach afforded up to 9-fold lower uncertainties and required 100-fold less sample compared to the 13 C-qNMR, the 13 C-qNMR is able to assign δ 13 C values to all carbon atoms in the molecule, not just the cleavable methoxy group.
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