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Kinetic Analysis of High-Temperature Sunflower Oil Peroxidation Inhibited by the Major Families of Phenolic Antioxidants Unveils the Extraordinary Activity of 1,4-Hydroquinones.

Fabio MollicaLucia BonoldiRiccardo Amorati
Published in: Antioxidants (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Peroxidation of vegetable oils represents a major problem for the food and biodiesel industries, and it is greatly accelerated by oil degree of unsaturation and by temperature increase. Phenols represent the most common additives used to counteract oil peroxidation, however clear structure-activity relationships at high temperatures are not available. We report, herein, a kinetic study of O 2 consumption during spontaneous peroxidation of sunflower oil at 130 °C in the presence of 18 antioxidants belonging to the main families of natural and synthetic phenols, including α-tocopherol, alkylphenols (BHT, BHA), hydroquinones (TBHD), catechols (quercetin, catechin) and gallates. Results show that TBHQ provide the best protection in terms of induction period ( IP ) duration and O 2 consumption rate. EPR spectroscopy demonstrated that the inhibition activity is negatively correlated to the stability of the phenoxyl radical of the antioxidant (A • ), suggesting that chain propagation with linoleate (RH) moieties A • + RH → AH + R • decreases the efficacy of those antioxidants forming persistent A • radicals. These results provide important information to optimize the antioxidant activity of phenols and of novel phenol-based materials.
Keyphrases
  • fatty acid
  • high temperature
  • oxidative stress
  • high resolution
  • anti inflammatory
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment