Title of article
Relationship between intensity, concentration, and temperature for drinking water odorants
Author/Authors
Andrew J. Whelton، نويسنده , , Andrea M. Dietrich، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
11
From page
1604
To page
1614
Abstract
Odor analyses experiments indicated that, for the concentrations and temperatures tested, odor intensity was a function of both aqueous concentration and water temperature for water containing 1-butanol, free available chlorine, geosmin, n-hexanal, 2-methylisoborneol, and trans-2, cis-6 nonadienal. At weak odorant concentrations (approximately 4 on the flavor profile rating scale) the perceived odor intensity of these six chemicals was greater when the temperature was 45°C than was 25°C. Both of these temperatures are commonly encountered by consumers when they use tap water. Odor response to water containing isobutanal was affected by concentration but not water temperature. Experiments also revealed that reduction in aqueous concentration did not consistently reduce odor intensity; for some aqueous concentrations and chemicals an increase in odor intensity occurred at lower concentrations.
Keywords
Drinking water , temperature , 2-Methylisoborneol (MIB) , odor , Chlorine , flavor profile analysis , geosmin
Journal title
Water Research
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Water Research
Record number
768955
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