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'FRANSI Al ION CANADA IN;', NATIONAL . ., , 07 fAWA . . S ï. FISHERIES RESEARCH BOARD OF CANADA_-_:, - :cm,ADA Translation Series No. 633 The relationship of fish-odour reversion to the isomerization and polymerization of fatty acids in whale fats By T. A. Khorin _ • • `:-_-)C 0-\ • Original title: Zavisimost' reversiya rybnogo zapakha ot izomerizatsii i polimerizatsii zhirnykh kislot V kitovykh zhirakh. From: Izvestiia Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedenii, Pishchevaya Tekhnologiya for 1965, No. 1, pp. 114-117. Translated by: G. Phillips, • Bureau for Translations, Foreiàn Languages Division, Department of the Secretary of State of Canada Fisheries Research Board of Canada Technological Research Laboratory, Halifax, N. S. S 1965 I I BUREAU FOR TRANSLATIONS FOREIGN LANGUAGES - .wwiee men DIVISION / FeY -T D'É 1" A BUREAU DES TRADUCTIONS DEPARTMEN.T OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE CANADA SECRÉTAI ;-) DIVISION DES LANGUES ËTRANGÈRES TRANSLATED FROM - TRADUCTION DE Russian English SUBJECT - SUJET Food.technology AUTHOR - AUTEUR T.A. Khorin TITLE IN ENGLISH - TITRE AN?LAIS h) . The dePendunce of fish-odour reversion.on the isomerization and polymerization of fatty acids in whale fats. TITLE IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE - TITRE EN LANGUE gTRANGbIE Zavisimoste reversiya rybnogo zapakha ot izomerizatsli polimerizatsil zhirnykh kislot v kitovykh zhirakh. REFERENCE - RdFeRENCE (NAME or 13001A OR PUBLICATION - NOM DU LIVRE OU PUBLICATION; , (Index No 70372) Food Technology, No. 1, 1965. Id, PUBLISHER - elDITEUR Mini str y of higher and intermediate special education of the USSR CITY - VILLE DATE Moscow REQUEST RECEIVED FROM REqufS PAR DEPARTMENT MINISTRE PAGES January, 1965 Mr. Larose Fisheries 4 ‘ri■ .11 r i le Wii „ ii (Russian) 10 (English) OUR NUMBER NOTRE DOSSIER NC) TRANSLATOR TRADUCTEUR r0 •) 5 G. Phillips .11•10 YOUR NUMBER VOTRE DOSSIER N 0 DATE RECEIVED REÇU LE riOs-300-11> DATE COMPLETED REMPLIE LE (Circa 17.9.65) 2 Nov. 65. - .411, 74'/'' M. -1 Proceedings of high'er educational establishments (Izvestiya Vysshikh Uchebnykh Zavedenii) FOOD TECHNOLOGY No. 1. 1965 n The dependence of fish-odour reversion'on the isomerization and polymerization of • fatty acids in whale fats. " T.A. Khorin Troitsk Fat- Combine. The aim of this work is to determine in liquid whale fat (of Antarctic origin) and its products, the fractions of fatty acids which govern the reversion of fishy taste and smell in deodorates of this fat and in whale tallows. The liquid, solid and polymerized fractions were separated by the Twitchell process, using the - property of insolubility of • lead salts of polymerized fatty acids in boiling ethyl alcohol acidified with acetic acid (1). • Liquid whale fat - loses its unpleasant . fishy smell when deodorized, and is not susceptible to reversion if its fatty acid content includes at least 10 - 13% by weight of polymerized acids. This quantity is formed in the first 45 minutes of deodorization at 275-285 °C (Table 1), whereas during the bext 45 minutes their growth rate is diminished by a factor of 8 or 9, for example. However, in the first 45 minutes of deedorizing (raw) linseed oil at the same temperatures we separated 98O% of the total ' 0 04112 weight of acids as polymerized flAtty acids, and in the next 45 minutes, 31.90%. In linseed oil and in liquid whale fat the fatty acids polymerized first are those having not less than three double bonds in the chain. These acids of whale fat form in the first 45 minutes 10 to 13% of the polymerized fraction, which.consists mainly,of high molecular weight fatty acids.(clupanodonic and the like) : (Table 1, experiments 1-6). Due tothe-conversion of the latter into polymer, reversion of the fishy taste and . odour of the fat is not transmitted to the produàts. . • With further deodorizing of . whale fat, when the . acids . . having not less than three double bonds in the dmdn are._ exhausted, the growth of the Tolymerized fraction Slows down abruptly (Table 1, experiments 7.84 8). We demonstrated that the quantity of solid acids in deodorized liquid whale fat rises initially to a maximum (Table 1, experiment 4), .and falls with further _ . _ deorizatn. In accordance with the.foregoing,. the molecular weights, coefficients of refraction end iodine numbers of the solid fractions increase initially and their. diminish (Experiments 1-6). This'is attributable to - the fact that during the first Minutes Of deodOrization, the high molecular weight, unsaturated fatty' acids of the liquid fraction of the raw fat, isomerizing, become solid, raising its mean moledular weight and other indices. With further deodoriZatien they go from the solid fraction into the polymerized fraction, while the indices of the solid fractions of the fatty acids diminish. We demonstrated such transitions in deodorizing the liquid fraction of the fatty acids of raw liquid whale fat (Table 2). In the first minute, isomerization and transition to the solid fraction are experienced by nearly all those unsaturated fatty acids which subsequently formthe- • polymerized fraction of the fatty acids . (Experiment 2). This is confirmed by the constant melting points of the liquid and solid fractions respectively in ail deodorates, and by the fact that the coefficient of refraction of the raw fatty acids at the beginning of the process falls and. remains constant in the liquid fractions of all deodorates (Experiments 2-6). Moreover, the polymerized fraction grows and the solid fraction diminishes concurrently, but the sum of both is approximately constant (20080-22.23%), i.e. the solid fraction is converted into the polymerized fraction (Experiments 2-6). The coefficients of refraction of the solid fractions intreased, evidently, at . the expense of the increasingly greater nUMber of fatty atid double bonds in the combined state (2). With more protracted deodorizing of whale . fat, the solid acids of the raw fat also become polymerized, copolymeriZed and partially enter the polymerized fraction of the deodorate. As a result of this transition and thanksoigptumnbers(coquntplw molecular weights), they raised the acidity of the polymerized fraction (Table 1, experiment 8). Reversion of fishy taste and odour in liquid whale deodorates depends ° on the quantity of.solid-fraction fatty acids which they contain. It appeared particularly quickly, for example, in those deodorates where the difference between the solid fraction content in the deodorate and in the raw fat was greatest, I,e. in the range 9 to 13% (Table 1, experiments 2-5). Reversion did not occur if this difference was under 3% (Experiment 6). Evidently in this case reversion in the deodorate will not occur if high molecular_weight,:_isomerized, unsaturated fatty acids have gone from its solid fraction into its polymerized fraction. - • - In studying.the solid fractions of fatty acids • extracted from whale tallows, we established that the change in properties of solid acids in the process of hydrogenating liquid whale fat. at 200-220 °C is identical with the change in properties of these acids in deodorization (Table 1) of the same whale fat. The co e fficients - of refraction, iodine numbers and molecular, weights of. . the solid acids of tallows also,increase at the beginning of hydrogenatioù • of whale fat, but diminish at the end of hydrogenation. quantitative At the same time, the solid fraction grows (Table 3). . • • Thus, in the hydrogenation of liquid whale fat also, high moleCular weight, unsatUrated fatty acids are first isomerized and go from the liquid fraction into the solid fraction, then they are hydrogenated and remain in the solid fraction or they are polymerized and go' int °. the polymerized fraction, while the - -iodine numbers and coefficients of refraction of thé solid fractions of the tallows diminish (Table 3). •• ./5 The falling of melting points and the increase in the molecular weights of the solid fractions at the beginning of hydrogenation of the fat is attributable to the fact that high molecular weight, isomerized fatty acids have a low melting point (Table 2), and, going into the solid fraction of the raw fat, they lower its melting point and raise the mean molecular weight of the solid acids (Table 3). • Subsequently the melting point of the solid fraction increases at the expense of the hydrogenated, high molecular weight, isomerized acids, whereas the mea.n, molecular weight of the fraction diminishes due to the partial transition of high molecular weight, isomerized fatty acids from the solid into the polymerized fraction,. and at the expense of dilution of the solid fraction with hydrogenated, low molecular weight, fatty acids. Reversion of fishy odour in the solid fractions of whale tallows does not occur if the difference between the coefficients of refraction of the solid fractions of the fatty acids of the whale .tallow and the raw fat does not exceed 0.0010 - 0.0015 (10-15 units), or if the difference in iodine numbers is 10-15, i.e. when the isomerized, high molecular weight, unsaturated fatty acids contained in the solid fraction are subjected to hydrogenation. - CONCLUSIONS 1. Reversion of fishy taste and smell in deodorized liquid whale fat does not occur if its fatty acid content includes at least 10 to 13% of polymerized acids which were formed from high molecular weight a c- ids having not less than three double bonds in the chain. 9 ../6 At the commencement of deodorization these unsaturated acids become isomerized, go into the solid fraction and then into the polymerized fraction of the whale fat deodorate. 2. In the hydrogenation of liquid whale fat, ' high molecular weight, unsaturated fatty acids also become isomerized, and go out of the liquid fraCtion'into the solid fraction, whereupon a large part of these isomerized acids becomes hydrogenaeèd and'reMains in . the solid fraction, and only a small part of them becomes polymerized and leaves the solid fraction, forming the polymerized fraction of whale tallow. Laboratory of physicochemical Received 2 March 1964 production control. - BIBLIOGRAPHY , 1. Tyutyunnikov, B.N., Bogdan, The Oil and Fat Industry, No. 9, 20, 1960. (Masloboyno-zhirl;kaya promyshlennost' 2. Zinov'ev, A.A., The Chemistry of (organic) Oils, 46o, 528, Pishchepromizdat (Food InduStry- Publishing House), Moscow, 1952. . • .../ • 7 Table 1. _ . Fractions of fatty acids p o 1 yra eri zed Solid (h) (a) .(e) I (d) (c) (f (g) ) (h) (1) Raw fat - 29,36 • I 44 I 276 I 1,4430 I 62 I 0,38 176,40 0,93 160,80 160,90 164,00 179,80 • 180,60 185,00 189,80 Fat deodorates 2 3• 4 5 6. 7 .8 1 5 10 20 45 90 300 . 38,40 38,90 42,96 38,60 f' 32,12 32,00 27,07 277 294 303 280 282 279 270 39 39 38 39 41 42 42 1,4450 1,4453 1,4500 1,4458 1,4446 1,4440 1.4427, 70 • 64 67 65 62 r 62 56 16 . . 4,10 12,57 14,00 17,50 Raw oil 9 - 18,60 I. --- I 298 j - I 0,26 Oil deodorates 10 12 • 13 14 15 (a) (1)) (e) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h) (1) 1 5 , 10 15 45 90 21,64 22,20 24,57 28,57 22,01 10,76 0,39 0,50 1,06 1,53 9,80 31,90 Experiment (Serial number). Duration of deodorization, minutes. Content, %. Melting point, °C. Molecular weight by Rust's method. Coefficient of refraction at 60°C. Iodine number by HUbeles method. Content, %. Potassium number, milligrams KOH. Qe (18 Table 2. t(b) › (0_1(d) 17 (e) l(f) Raw liquid fatty acids -5,5 1 1,4590 HAI< a a , Deodorates of liquid fatty acids H(11.1141Ca SI •• • T Be Fula st If Me p1130 Bamian )1(11,aita 13 Taepng flomime pH 30 II a 11u 313 >I<iuu<a n TBepÂao nommepx 30 BanHan n OJI 3 (a) (b) (o) (d) (e) (f) 5 10 5 >I<H,aing 15 6 TnepttaR Flomimepnottaintam >Kul< an Tnep2ta n 11 oil 1-1,1 e pFt 36 s tula 25 79,20 19,50 1,30 79,17 14,20 6,63 79,00 11,70 9,30 -5,5 19,0 1,4571 1,4565 -5,o' 19,0 1,4572 1,4591 19,0 1,4571 1,4594 78,70 7,10 14,20 77,77 1,03 21,20 --5,0 19,0 -5,5 19,0 , 1,4571 . 1,4611 1,4578 •1,4645 Experiment (Serial number). Fractions of fatty acids. Duration of deodorization, minutes. Ratio of fractions, %* Melting point, ° C. Coefficient of refraction at'60 °C. )1fm,gxasi - TrlepAast - Solid rforivnviepma 013aiilia51 - Liquid Polymerized • •./ 9 *, *if .1,1.1•Ce.M Solid fraction of fatty acids' (f ) (g) I (h)ft Raw fat 1 35,52 I 45 1 280 1 1,4430 48 1,4449 1,4460 1,4443 1,4140 62 - 71 60 Whale tallow - 2 3 4 5 (a) (b) (c) (d.) (e) (f) (g) (h) 1 2 3 4 42,54 59,42 60,46 62,03 39 • 32 36 37 299 311 302. 289 sa Experiment (Serial number) Duration of hydrogenation, hours° Content s %. Melting point, ° C. Molecular weight by Rust's method. Coefficient of refraction at 60°C. Iodine number by Hilbel's method. Reversion. A I Did not occur 2. Occurred 3 4 Did not occur 1 t .5 1 i . .. / 1 0 • 10 - TRANSLATORS NOTES 1. The spellings of the surnames in the translation, i.e. Twitchell, àbel and Rust, are conjectural. 2. The comma is used as a decimal point in the tables. (This notation has not been used in the translation). 3. As the distinction between whale oil and liquid whale fat is a subtle one, the Russian "zhir" • has been rendered by "fat" in every instance, and the Russian "maslo" (which appears only in the Tables) by t oil". The word "blubber" has been avoided as unscientific. 4. The word "deodorate" has been coined to mean "deodorized product" after the Russian "dezodorat" by analogy with hydrate, filtrate etc. 5. Further research indicates that bibliographical reference #1 should read: "Butter and Fats Industry,. No , 9, 20, 1960" (Maslozhirovaya promyshlennost , ) Vide index number 70510 in the Soviet catalogue "Newspapers and Magazines of the USSR for 1966".