terclim by ICS banner
IVES 9 IVES Conference Series 9 Macrowine 9 Macrowine 2025 9 Analysis and composition of grapes, wines, wine spirits 9 Effect of ozone treatments in wine production of young and short-term aged white wines: destructive and non-destructive evaluation of main quality attributes

Effect of ozone treatments in wine production of young and short-term aged white wines: destructive and non-destructive evaluation of main quality attributes

Abstract

The main aim of WiSSaTech project (PRIN P2022LXY3A), supported by Italian Ministero dell’Università e della Ricerca and NextGenerationEU program, is to investigate eco-friendly and safe alternatives to sulphur dioxide (SO2) in wine production. Three treatments were compared on two Italian white wines produced from grapes cv. Fiano and Vermentino as follow: by ozone treatment of grapes and cellar equipment either alone (O3) [1], or used into the Purovino® method [2], (PV), and by conventional use of SO2. All analyses were carried out on the obtained wines (T0), after accelerated aging at 35 °C for one week (T1), and after six months of conventional aging at 18 °C (T6). Non-destructive analyses were performed on the wine samples through NIR-AOTF [3] and E-nose [4] measurements together with destructive ones, FT-NIR detected and associated with the main oeno-chemical parameters, with detailed polyphenols analysed by HPLC-HRMS [5], and VOCs [6]. Results coming from both analytical approaches were subjected to chemometric analyses with the aim to appreciate combinate behaviours of wine samples with respect to the employed grape variety, the vinification process, and the timing of the wine aging. PLS-DA modelling performed on NIR data revealed that Vermentino wine samples exhibit a good classification performance (96%) based on the ageing time of sampling (T0, T1, and T6), otherwise observed as lower in Fiano wines (74%). Statistical performances were reduced when single wine samples (O3, PV, and SO2) were considered as discriminative variables of classification (47% and 63% for Fiano and Vermentino wines, respectively). PLS-DA computed on E-nose data lead to similar results, showing a discrimination among T0, T1 and T6 (92%, and 76% for Vermentino and Fiano, respectively), regardless the single wine samples associated with the treatments. Conversely, the segregation among these last looked less evident (50%, and 41% for Vermentino e Fiano, respectively), being probably affected by an overlapping of the samples at T6. PCA computation performed on destructive data revealed a clear sample segregation between T0 and T6 times, for both the variety and the treatments. A significant correlation was found about the stability of the wines between accelerated aging (T1) and T6, based on the DE. Wine samples with no added sulphites showed the lower stability, particularly in Fiano, due to the highest catechin index values and Cu++ concentrations.

References

[1] Bellincontro, A., Catelli, C., Cotarella, R., & Mencarelli, F. (2017). Aust. J. Grape and Wine Res. 23(2), 200-206.

[2] Mencarelli, F., Catelli, C. (2013). Process for the Treatment and the Winemaking of Grapes. Italy Patent No. PCT/IB2012/000036.

[3] Antolini, A., Forniti, R., Modesti, M., Bellincontro, A., Catelli, C., Mencarelli, F. (2020). Ozone: Sci. Eng. 43(3), 254-262.

[4] Martínez-García, Rafael, et al. (2021). Food Chem. 334: 127574.

[5] Fia, G., Gori, C., Bucalossi, G., Borghini, F., Zanoni, B. (2018). Antioxidants, 7(2), 27.

[6] Slaghenaufi, D., Ugliano, M. (2018). Front. Chem., 6, 66.

Publication date: June 4, 2025

Type: Poster

Authors

Gianmarco Alfieri1,*, Riccardo Riggi1, Margherita Modesti1, Francesca Borghini4, Stefano Ferrari4, Giorgia Botta2,3, Susana Río Segade2,3, Andrea Bellincontro1

1 Department of Biological AgroFood and Forest Systems, University of Tuscia, Via De Lellis, 01100 Viterbo, Italy
2 Department of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences, University of Turin, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy
3 Interdepartmental Centre for Grapevines and Wine Sciences, University of Turin, Corso Enotria 2/C, 12051 Alba, Italy
4 ISVEA S.r.l.,Via Basilicata 1/3/5, 53036 Poggibonsi (SI), Italy

Contact the author*

Keywords

ozone, white wines, NIRs, E-nose, oeno-chemical attributes, polyphenols, VOCs

Tags

IVES Conference Series | Macrowine | Macrowine 2025

Related articles…

Release and perception of γ-nonalactone and massoia lactone in the red wine matrix: impact of ethanol and acidity

Climate change (CC) is altering grape/wine composition, challenging wine sensory quality. Rising temperatures increase grape sugar levels, with higher wine ethanol (EtOH) contents, reduce total acidity (TA) converging with increased pH and lead to the accumulation of CC odorous markers such as γ-nonalactone (γ-C9) and massoia lactone (ML).

New insights of translocation of smoke-related volatile phenols in vivo grapevines

The increasing frequency of wildfires in grape-growing regions is seen as a significant risk for the grape and wine industry.

Sensory patterns observed towards the oxidation of white, rosé and sparkling wines: An exploratory study

Oxygen management is crucial in terms of wine quality. Even more for white and rosé wines, which are less protected against oxidation than reds due to the lower levels of antioxidant polyphenols. This need is due to the existence of equilibria between chemical forms depending on the redox potential.

Gas Chromatography-Olfactometry (GCO) screening of odorant compounds associated with the tails-off flavour in wine distillates

The development of off-flavours in wine distillates, particularly those associated with the tails fraction, is a key issue in the production of high-quality spirits.

Field performance of red and white “pilzwiderstandsfähige” (PIWI) cultivars in the south of Uruguay

As knowledge about the oenological potential of disease-tolerant grape varieties (PIWI) continues to grow and consumer demand for product safety and sustainable production increases, more governments worldwide are permitting the cultivation of these varieties [1].