An experimental method to study emissions from heated tobacco between 100-200°C.

Chem Cent J

GR&D Centre, British American Tobacco, Regents Park Road, Southampton, SO15 8TL UK.

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated the effects of heating tobacco at temperatures between 100-200°C to analyze the emissions of harmful compounds in cigarette smoke.
  • The research found that seven toxicants—including nicotine, carbon monoxide, and certain aldehydes—could be detected, with their levels generally increasing at higher temperatures.
  • The findings suggest that lower-temperature heating can reduce some toxic emissions, with the main release of compounds occurring through evaporative transfer and thermal breakdown.

Article Abstract

Background: Cigarette smoke emissions are mainly produced by distillation, pyrolysis and combustion reactions when the tobacco is burnt. Some studies have shown that heating tobacco to temperatures below pyrolysis and combustion temperatures has the potential to reduce or eliminate some toxicants found in cigarette smoke. In this study, we designed a bench-top tube furnace that heats tobacco between 100-200°C and systematically studied the effects of heating temperatures on selected gas phase and aerosol phase compounds using an ISO machine-smoking protocol.

Results: Among a list of target chemical compounds, seven toxicants (nicotine, carbon monoxide, acetaldehyde, crotonaldehyde, formaldehyde, NNN and NNK) were quantifiable but not at all temperatures examined. The levels of the compounds generally displayed an increasing trend with increasing temperatures. The observed carbon monoxide and aldehydes represented the initial thermal breakdown products from the tobacco constituents. Water was the largest measured component in the total aerosol phase collected and appeared to be mainly released by evaporation; nicotine release characteristics were consistent with bond breaking and evaporation. Quantifiable levels of NNK and NNN were thought to be the result of evaporative transfer from the tobacco blend.

Conclusions: These results demonstrate the practical utility of this tool to study low-temperature toxicant formation and emission from heated tobacco. Between 100 to 200°C, nicotine and some cigarette smoke compounds were released as a result of evaporative transfer or initial thermal decomposition from the tobacco blend.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4418098PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13065-015-0096-1DOI Listing

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