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Sugar Pyrolysis in Cigarettes

Sugar Pyrolysis in Cigarettes . Define Change in Smoke Chemistry (vs. reference cigarette) What is change?. What is change? Change is defined by current validated analytical methods Change as defined by risk Change defined as new additions to smoke chemicals

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Sugar Pyrolysis in Cigarettes

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  1. Sugar Pyrolysis in Cigarettes

  2. Define Change in Smoke Chemistry (vs. reference cigarette)What is change? • What is change? • Change is defined by current validated analytical methods • Change as defined by risk • Change defined as new additions to smoke chemicals • Change defined as more of the same?

  3. Determining change by determining the Fate of the additive • Stable isotope methods or radiolabeled methods • Unchanged • Partially changed (combustion chemistry) • Totally changed • Influence smoke chemistry • New combustion products • Increase or decrease existing products

  4. Sugars in Cigarettes • Found naturally in the tobacco leaf ( 0.8% to 25%) • Air cured tobaccos have lower levels ( burley and Maryland) • Oriental Tobacco has levels from 5 to 25%. • Sugars are added to Cigarettes • Casings ( help hold form and moisture) • Flavor and texture (mellow or smooth)

  5. Sugars in Cigarettes Natural vs. Additive • Naturally occurring in leaf mono, di and polysaccharides ( carbohydrates 40% of leaf lamina). • Sugars are added to Cigarettes usually as a monosaccharide (sucrose or glucose). • Added directly to the tobacco during manufacturing. • Spray application ( up to 3.5% by wt.)

  6. Define Change in Smoke Chemistry with Sucrose as an additive • Fate Studies do not always differentiate surface applied from naturally occurring sugars within the leaf. • Total carbohydrates contribute to same products. • Fate (pyrolysis, radiolabeled, and stable isotope) • Radiolabeled (Jenkins et al 1975; Green 1977) • Reference no filtered cigarette • Carbon 14 sucrose and glucose

  7. Pyrolysis of Sucrose • Results Carbon 14 • 99.5% changed in mainstream • MS 8.4% gas; 4.2% TPM • SS 73% gas; 7.4% TPM (40% CO2 and 10% CO) • Butt 4.7% • Ash 7.4% (0.3%) • Unchanged found on particulate 0.5% • Distribution radioactivity- 12.6% in mainstream , 80.4%

  8. Pyrolysis Products • Most prevalent Products gas phase radiolabled studies • Furans and Carbonyls • Other products • Acetonitrile • Acetone • Acetaldehyde

  9. Pyrolysis ProductsCO2 and Formaldehyde

  10. Change in Smoke Chemistry with Sugar as an additive • Results (Thornton and Massey)

  11. Change in Smoke Chemistry with Sugar as an additive • Results continued

  12. Define Change in Smoke Chemistry with Menthol as an additive • Evaluation of Sugar for Use as a Cigarette ingredient by PM (along with other ingredients) • Reference 1R4F • Smoke products analyzed by PM numbered 50 • FTC analytes • TPM, Nicotine, Water and CO

  13. Change in Smoke Chemistry with sugar as an additive • Conclusions • Adds to already existing smoke products. (Overall changes difficult to detect) • No change in nicotine levels. • No data on overall constituents (PM report has results but includes the groups of 330 test ingredients) • No really clean study completed in regards to our interests.

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