Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke

This report presents the results of a study regarding the transfer of maleic hydrazide (MH) into mainstream cigarette smoke. Cigarettes with different levels of MH were used in this study. This included cigarettes with MH preexistent in the tobacco due to the agronomical practice, and with spiked MH...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wood W, Dooly GL, Moldoveanu SC
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2003-03-01
Series:Beiträge zur Tabakforschung International
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/cttr-2013-0746
id doaj-8f5af0967b3847b783e72937aa9fed88
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8f5af0967b3847b783e72937aa9fed882021-09-06T19:22:13ZengSciendoBeiträge zur Tabakforschung International1612-92372003-03-0120532533010.2478/cttr-2013-0746cttr-2013-0746Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette SmokeWood W0Dooly GL1Moldoveanu SC2Brown&Williamson Tobacco Corp., 2600 Weaver Rd., Macon GA, 31217, USA.Brown&Williamson Tobacco Corp., 2600 Weaver Rd., Macon GA, 31217, USA.Brown&Williamson Tobacco Corp., 2600 Weaver Rd., Macon GA, 31217, USA.This report presents the results of a study regarding the transfer of maleic hydrazide (MH) into mainstream cigarette smoke. Cigarettes with different levels of MH were used in this study. This included cigarettes with MH preexistent in the tobacco due to the agronomical practice, and with spiked MH. Because the MH can be present in tobacco as bound and free forms, both levels of MH were measured in the tobacco section. The cigarette designs covered a range of possibilities, including Plain, Filter King Size (KS), Lights 100’s, Ultra Lights, etc. The results showed that the amount of MH in smoke, on the one hand, is a function of the total particulate matter (TPM) of the cigarette, and higher TPM levels lead to more MH in smoke. On the other hand, the transferred level of MH depends on the total amount of MH (both bound and free) in the tobacco. The relative % transfer is higher for lower MH levels than for higher MH levels in tobacco. When normalized by TPM, the transfer as an average is about 0.24% per mg of TPM from the amount of MH in 1 g of tobacco, and as high as 0.46% per mg of TPM from the amount of MH in 1 g tobacco for a nonfilter low MH level cigarette. The resulting MH transfer for a nonfilter cigarette with low tobacco MH is therefore about 8.3% from the total MH in the cigarette. For filter full flavor (FF) cigarettes with high tobacco levels of MH, the transfer is about 5.8%. This relative transfer rate appears to be lower from higher MH levels in tobacco.https://doi.org/10.2478/cttr-2013-0746
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wood W
Dooly GL
Moldoveanu SC
spellingShingle Wood W
Dooly GL
Moldoveanu SC
Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
Beiträge zur Tabakforschung International
author_facet Wood W
Dooly GL
Moldoveanu SC
author_sort Wood W
title Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
title_short Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
title_full Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
title_fullStr Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
title_full_unstemmed Transfer of Maleic Hydrazide into Mainstream Cigarette Smoke
title_sort transfer of maleic hydrazide into mainstream cigarette smoke
publisher Sciendo
series Beiträge zur Tabakforschung International
issn 1612-9237
publishDate 2003-03-01
description This report presents the results of a study regarding the transfer of maleic hydrazide (MH) into mainstream cigarette smoke. Cigarettes with different levels of MH were used in this study. This included cigarettes with MH preexistent in the tobacco due to the agronomical practice, and with spiked MH. Because the MH can be present in tobacco as bound and free forms, both levels of MH were measured in the tobacco section. The cigarette designs covered a range of possibilities, including Plain, Filter King Size (KS), Lights 100’s, Ultra Lights, etc. The results showed that the amount of MH in smoke, on the one hand, is a function of the total particulate matter (TPM) of the cigarette, and higher TPM levels lead to more MH in smoke. On the other hand, the transferred level of MH depends on the total amount of MH (both bound and free) in the tobacco. The relative % transfer is higher for lower MH levels than for higher MH levels in tobacco. When normalized by TPM, the transfer as an average is about 0.24% per mg of TPM from the amount of MH in 1 g of tobacco, and as high as 0.46% per mg of TPM from the amount of MH in 1 g tobacco for a nonfilter low MH level cigarette. The resulting MH transfer for a nonfilter cigarette with low tobacco MH is therefore about 8.3% from the total MH in the cigarette. For filter full flavor (FF) cigarettes with high tobacco levels of MH, the transfer is about 5.8%. This relative transfer rate appears to be lower from higher MH levels in tobacco.
url https://doi.org/10.2478/cttr-2013-0746
work_keys_str_mv AT woodw transferofmaleichydrazideintomainstreamcigarettesmoke
AT doolygl transferofmaleichydrazideintomainstreamcigarettesmoke
AT moldoveanusc transferofmaleichydrazideintomainstreamcigarettesmoke
_version_ 1717772485474123776