Iterated Reaction Graphs:  Simulating Complex Maillard Reaction Pathways

Shail Patel, Jeremy Rabone, Stephen Russell, Jos Tissen, and Werner Klaffke§
Unilever Research Port Sunlight Laboratory, Bebington, Wirral, L63 3JW, UK, Unilever Research Vlaardingen Laboratory, Olivier van Noortlaan 120, NL-3133AT Vlaardingen, The Netherlands, and Westflische Wilhelms-Universitt Mnster, Organisch-chemisches Institut, Corrensstrasse 40, D-48149 Mnster, Germany
J. Chem. Inf. Comput. Sci., 2001, 41 (4), pp 926–933
DOI: 10.1021/ci000399a
Publication Date (Web): May 2, 2001
Copyright © 2001 American Chemical Society

 Unilever Research Port Sunlight Laboratory.

,

 Unilever Research Vlaardingen Laboratory.

,
§

 Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster.

Abstract

This study investigates a new method of simulating a complex chemical system including feedback loops and parallel reactions. The practical purpose of this approach is to model the actual reactions that take place in the Maillard process, a set of food browning reactions, in sufficient detail to be able to predict the volatile composition of the Maillard products. The developed framework, called iterated reaction graphs, consists of two main elements:  a soup of molecules and a reaction base of Maillard reactions. An iterative process loops through the reaction base, taking reactants from and feeding products back to the soup. This produces a reaction graph, with molecules as nodes and reactions as arcs. The iterated reaction graph is updated and validated by comparing output with the main products found by classical gas-chromatographic/mass spectrometric analysis. To ensure a realistic output and convergence to desired volatiles only, the approach contains a number of novel elements:  rate kinetics are treated as reaction probabilities; only a subset of the true chemistry is modeled; and the reactions are blocked into groups.

Tools

SciFinder Links

SciFinder subscribers:  Click to sign in | Not a SciFinder subscriber? Learn more at www.cas.org

History

  • Published In Issue July 23, 2001
  • Received October 7, 2000

Recommend & Share

Related Content

Other ACS content by these authors: