Scientists develop app to measure the freshness of beer

| May 23, 2016 in Lifestyle

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Chemists have completed some very important research and have developed a method that allows brewers to measure the freshness of beer.

Using a polymer sensor that changes colour upon detecting furfural, a compound that appears when this beverage ages and gives it a stale flavour. The sensor can be controlled from a smartphone app, created by the team at the Complutense University of Madrid. Beer storage conditions can alter the flavour and chemical composition produced during beer. This may have a negative effect on the quality of the flavour.

Now, a team of chemists, led by the researchers Elena Benito-Peña and María Cruz Moreno-Bondi from the Complutense University of Madrid (UCM), has developed a simple, low-cost method capable of measuring whether or not beer has gone stale, simply by using a sensor and a smartphone app. The results of the study have been published in the journal Analytical Chemistry.

The researcher points out that up until now brewers have measured furfural -- a chemical compound that appears during the aging process of beer and gives it a stale taste -- and other freshness indicators using methods based on chromatography techniques. "But these methods involve the use of expensive equipment and sample preparation is very time-consuming," she highlights.

The system developed by the researchers at the UCM consists of sensor discs that detect the presence of furfural in beer. These sensors, made from a polymer similar to the one used to manufacture contact lenses, have been designed to change colour (from yellow to pink) when they come into contact with a beer containing furfural.

"We have incorporated an aniline derivative into the sensor material which reacts with the furfural and produces a pink cyanine derivative that allows us to identify the presence of the marker in the sample. The intensity of the colour increases as the concentration of furfural in the beer rises and, thus, as more time passes since the beer was produced," explained the chemist.

The team has also created a mobile app for Android smartphones that, by taking a picture of the sensor disc, allows for the identification of the amount of furfural present in the beer. With this data, the degree of freshness can be determined.

The results of the tests on the new system "have been very satisfactory," said the co-author. "The measurements have been taken using samples sent directly from the brewing company with different production dates and distinct degrees of aging. These same samples were also sent to a laboratory where they were analysed using gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry. The results we obtained were completely comparable," she emphasised.

The application is available as open source, meaning that any programmer can utilise and modify it to be used on other platforms. In the future, it will also be available for Apple IOS.

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