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Thermal treatment process for tobacco materials

a technology of thermal treatment and tobacco materials, applied in tobacco treatment, tobacco smoke filter, tobacco, etc., can solve problems such as reactions that form certain byproducts

Inactive Publication Date: 2015-05-07
R J REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
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  • Summary
  • Abstract
  • Description
  • Claims
  • Application Information

AI Technical Summary

Benefits of technology

The present invention provides a way to thermally process tobacco materials with additives that change their nature and character. These additives prevent the formation of harmful byproducts when the tobacco material is heated. The additives can include minerals, proteins, enzymes, and other compounds that act on the tobacco material. The method also involves controlling certain heat treatment parameters to change the chemistry of the heat-treated product, such as maintaining a low pH or reducing heating time or temperature. This results in tobacco products with improved sensory properties and reduced harmful substances.

Problems solved by technology

Such processes often include the application of heat to a tobacco material, which can result in reactions that form certain byproducts.

Method used

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Examples

Experimental program
Comparison scheme
Effect test

example 1

Control Formulation and Effect of Drying Time

[0084]Rods made using the formula set forth in Table 1 below are dried for 10, 15, 20, 30 and 40 minutes to demonstrate the effect of drying time on acrylamide formation. The sample dried for 15 minutes was used as a control for comparison for all experiments.

TABLE 1% w / wg / batchDry ingredients:Tobacco40.0%120.0Sucralose (Tate and Lyle Sucralose Inc., Decatur, IL) 1.0% 3.0Titanium dioxide (Mutchler Inc., Harrington Park, NJ) 1.0% 3.0Calcium Carbonate HD PPT Fine (Univar USA Inc., 5.0% 15.0Seattle, WA)Maltodextrin 10DE (Grain Processing Corp. Muscatine,16.0% 48.0IA)Rice Flour (Remy n.v., Leuven-Wijgmaal, Belgium)16.0% 48.0Xanthan gum (Tic Gums Inc., Belcamp, MD)15.0% 45.0Sodium chloride USP (J.T. Baker, Mallinckrodt Baker Inc., 4.0% 12.0Phillipsburg, NJ)Wet blend:Sodium hydroxide (Certified A.C.S., Fisher Scientific, Fair 1.5% 4.5Lawn, NJ)Glycerin (Vitusa Products Inc., Berkeley Height, NJ)  0.5% 1.5110 mL of WaterTotal ingredients except w...

example 2

Effect of pH

[0086]A tobacco composition is processed the same as the control sample in Example 1, except that the sodium hydroxide is reduced to 2.25 g (one-half of the amount used in Example 1). Maltodextrin is increased to 49.10 g and rice flour is increased to 49.15 g. The pH before drying is 7.54 and the pH after drying is 7.27. The acrylamide content is 1250 ng / g, which represents a 51% decrease in acrylamide as compared to the control sample, which has a pH of 8.68 before drying and 8.08 after drying.

[0087]Another tobacco composition is processed the same as Example 1, except that no sodium hydroxide is added. Maltodextrin and rice flour are increased to 50.25 g each. The pH before drying is 6.51 and the pH after drying is 6.56. The acrylamide content is 178 ng / g, a drop of 93% as compared to the control. This testing indicates that acrylamide content increases with increases in pH during drying.

example 3

Effect of Amino Acids

[0088]L-lysine HCl is dissolved in 80 mL of water and the solution is stirred into the tobacco. The solution is allowed to soak into the tobacco for 20 minutes before using. The treated tobacco is mixed with the other dry ingredients in the Pasta Maker. The final composition has the formulation set forth in Table 2 below. The formulation is otherwise processed in the same manner as the control sample in Example 1.

TABLE 2% w / w g / batchDry ingredients:Tobacco40.0%120.0 L-Lysine HCl monohydrate, USP (J.T. 1.0% 3.00Baker, Mallinckrodt Baker Inc.,Phillipsburg, NJ)80 mL of waterSucralose 1.0% 3.00Titanium dioxide 1.0% 3.00Calcium Carbonate (HD PPT Fine) 5.0% 15.00Maltodextrin (10DE)15.3% 46.00Rice Flour15.2% 45.50Xanthan gum15.3% 45.75Sodium chloride 4.0% 12.00Wet blend:Sodium hydroxide 1.8% 5.25Glycerin 0.5% 1.5030 mL of waterTotal ingredients except water: 100%300.00

[0089]Another formulation is prepared in the same matter as the formulation of Table 2, except that th...

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PUM

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Abstract

A method of preparing a tobacco material for use in a smoking article is provided, including (i) mixing a tobacco material, water, and an additive selected from the group consisting of lysine, glycine, histidine, alanine, methionine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, proline, phenylalanine, valine, arginine, di- and trivalent cations, asparaginase, saccharides, phenolic compounds, reducing agents, compounds having a free thiol group, oxidizing agents, oxidation catalysts, plant extracts, and combinations thereof; (ii) heating the mixture; and (iii) incorporating the heat-treated mixture into a smoking article as a smokable material. A smoking article in the form of a cigarette is also provided that includes a tobacco material pre-treated to inhibit reaction of asparagine to form acrylamide in mainstream smoke. Upon smoking, the smoking article is characterized by an acrylamide content of mainstream smoke that is reduced relative to an untreated control smoking article.

Description

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS[0001]This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 12 / 476,621, filed Jun. 2, 2009, which is hereby incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.FIELD OF THE INVENTION[0002]The invention relates to processes for treatment of tobacco, and in particular, to processes useful for the thermal treatment of tobacco materials.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION[0003]Popular smoking articles, such as cigarettes, have a substantially cylindrical rod shaped structure and include a charge, roll or column of smokable material such as shredded tobacco (e.g., in cut filler form) surrounded by a paper wrapper thereby forming a so-called “tobacco rod.” Normally, a cigarette has a cylindrical filter element aligned in an end-to-end relationship with the tobacco rod. Typically, a filter element comprises plasticized cellulose acetate tow circumscribed by a paper material known as “plug wrap.” Certain cigarettes incorporate a filter element h...

Claims

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Application Information

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Patent Type & Authority Applications(United States)
IPC IPC(8): A24B15/18A24D3/00A24B13/00A24C5/00
CPCA24B15/18A24B13/00A24D3/00A24C5/00A24B3/12A24B15/20A24B15/30A24B15/306A24B15/307
Inventor CHEN, GONGGERARDI, ANTHONY RICHARDMUA, JOHN-PAULHOLTON, JR., DARRELL EUGENECANTRELL, DANIEL VERDINST. CHARLES, FRANK KELLEYMOLDOVEANU, SERBAN C.BRINKLEY, PAUL ANDREW
Owner R J REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY
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