Em. Calvey et al., OFF-LINE SUPERCRITICAL-FLUID EXTRACTION OF THIOSULFINATES FROM GARLICAND ONION, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 42(6), 1994, pp. 1335-1341
Supercritical fluid (SF) extracts of fresh garlic (Allium sativum) and
fresh onion (Allium cepa) were analyzed by liquid chromatography, gas
chromatography (GC), and mass spectrometry (MS). Allicin (2-propene-1
-sulfinothioic acid S-2-propenyl ester), the major thiosulfinate found
in fresh garlic, was readily extracted by using Supercritical CO2 (SC
-CO2). Under SF extraction conditions using a solvent trap, the yield
of allicin from a water homogenate of fresh garlic was 98.2%; however,
when a solid-phase trap (i.e., condensation on glass beads) was used,
the yield of allicin was 124.6% relative to yields obtained with meth
ylene chloride extraction. An increase in the quantity of thermal deco
mposition products with respect to allicin was evident when the garlic
was extracted at temperatures greater than 36 degrees C. The identity
of allicin in the garlic SF extracts was confirmed by thermospray MS.
The SF extraction of yellow onion was ca. 69% as efficient as the ext
raction with diethyl ether, as determined by GC-MS.