Vineyards producing Chilean wine near Santa Cruz in the Colchagua Valley in central Chile
Chile, located in the southern hemisphere, is unique.
Longitudinally, Chile is the world's longest country, extending over 2,600 miles. It runs from the Atacama Desert in the far north, the driest nonpolar desert in the world, to the Tierra del Fuego archipelago and the Drake Passage in the south, where the Atlantic, Pacific and Southern oceans meet.
That makes Chile the southernmost country in the world. East to West, it鈥檚 wedged between the Andes 鈥 the longest mountain range in the world 鈥 and the Pacific Ocean.
The country features arid deserts, beaches, fjords, volcanoes, snow-capped mountains, lakes, forests, ice fields and glaciers. The diversity of its topography and extreme geography produces fertile ground. As such, Chile is renowned for its quality vineyards.
Vi帽a Concha y Toro, the largest wine grower in Latin America, dates back to 1883. Headquartered in Santiago, Chile, it cultivates 21,500 acres of vineyards spread throughout the continent鈥檚 major winegrowing regions. This includes eight principal valleys, from Limar铆 in the north, with low rainfall, moderate temperature oscillation and the impact of the ocean breeze, across Maipo and Maule, with high temperatures, to B铆o-B铆o in the south, with higher rainfalls and lower temperatures.
The soil, selection of plant material, and finally the cultivation form in the vineyard are further influences on the grapes. Managing harvests from such a diverse collection of vineyards is key to Vi帽a Concha y Toro鈥檚 operations. So the winery turned to science, and to a new approach to improve its grape and wine classification system.
A three-hour drive south of the centrally located capital Santiago lays the city of Talca. It is the capital of Maule, which in sharing its name as a state and wine region underlines its importance as a center for agriculture and viticulture.
It鈥檚 also the home of Vi帽a Concha y Toro麓s Center for Research and Innovation (CRI).The CRI was inaugurated in 2014, and has fully equipped laboratories and an experimental cellar to address diverse research topics in viticulture, enology, molecular biology and engineering. Since 2014, its mission has been to promote applied research, technological development and knowledge transfer in order to make better, more competitive and consistent wines in a dynamic international market with increasingly demanding consumers. (Vi帽a Concha y Toro, 2021).
Vi帽a Concha y Toro Center of Research and Innovation
Doreen Schober, Ph.D.
Scientists at the CRI recently began to tackle the challenge of classifying grapes and wines in terms of quality, which implies the analysis of chemical compounds that form color, flavor, mouthfeel, aroma, among other traits, by turning to spectroscopic techniques. After three years of investigation on chemical quality markers and method development, their pilot program reached industrial scale and is showing promising results. The company hopes to expand it beyond testing to in-line quality assurance and quality control in their commercial wineries.
鈥淭he big picture is objective quality management,鈥 Vi帽a Concha y Toro Researcher Doreen Schober, Ph.D. said. 鈥淢aking conclusions from the chemical composition of the grapes, allows us to predict wine quality independently from external factors, and supports the winemakers in their decisions in the production process.鈥
The company produces several varieties of wines from grapes cultivated in hundreds of company-owned vineyards or purchased from producers. Cabernet Sauvignon is the most common and popular in Chile and Vi帽a Concha y Toro, and the winery has different brands and quality levels.
Quality aptitude classification is typically done in the field by company experts mainly based on viticultural traits, and few major components like sugars, but the fairest and most objective way to characterize quality is the chemical composition.
In fact, the Australian and Californian wine industries have been conducting research to establish standards for chemical quality markers in grapes for an optimized wine production since more than a decade (Bindon et al., 2020; Cleary et al., 2015). Those mainly include various polyphenolic compound families, few aromas and maturity parameters.
鈥淔rom these key markers in grapes, you can draw conclusions about the wine,鈥 Schober, a German native said. 鈥淭o get there, we're analyzing the grape chemical composition, and also the wine chemical composition from standardized experimental wines we investigate in our experimental cellar. Then, as we麓re evaluating the sensory properties of the wines from this data, it麓s possible to obtain machine learning models to predict wine quality.鈥
To do that, they traditionally relied on analysis techniques including High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and Gas Chromatography (GC). These methods, however, tend to be slow, expensive, time consuming and require environmentally unfriendly consumables.
鈥淰i帽a Concha y Toro sought out other techniques to characterize its grapes and wines鈥 CRI laboratory Leader Jorge Zincker said. 鈥淚n a way that could be localized, rapid, accurate, economical and sustainable.鈥 The grapes can be tested in the field, and when they reach the winery. This allows us to rapidly obtain information about the chemical composition to conclude its quality potential, to assign these grapes to their corresponding brand and process, or even make corrections it might need. It鈥檚 in essence a way to sort the grapes.鈥
鈥淪o even though the grapes were grown for a certain quality level or brand, the quality tests support the winemaker to sort them out and to make a final determination as to what batch or brand it goes towards,鈥 Schober said.
That鈥檚 critical. The company produces dozens of brands, from varietal to high premium wines. Therefore the grapes and wines are assigned to six quality categories, and within these categories, the winemakers use three sub-categories to adjust based on their sensory judgements.
From left to right: Jorge Zincker, Doreen Schober, and M贸nica Rodr铆guez
To facilitate this complex process, the company is developing a digital platform for managing the grape quality potential as part of the pilot study. It鈥檚 tracking the grapes to its vineyard origin from being delivered by different trucks to fill wine tanks of up to 100.000 liters, documenting its chemical composition and quality assignment to the finished wine. It connects all participants in the production chain, including the field, the winemakers and the laboratories.
鈥淎lthough you might be working with grapes from the same vineyard plot, they will be different from harvest to harvest, depending on various factors like the climate. So to achieve the good wine, it鈥檚 absolutely necessary to keep track of their properties in the moment,鈥 Schober said.
Right now, Vi帽a Concha y Toro鈥檚 pilot program is to use a 蓝鲸体育直播 Aqualog with its Autosampler for monitoring grape potential at the beginning of the of winemaking process, and wine properties before blending wine batches. The instrument is operated by Chemist M贸nica Rodr铆guez.
The evaluation of the spectrophotometric measurements is thereby facilitated by the new 蓝鲸体育直播 Multi Model Predictor (HMMP) tool, which was recently developed in cooperation with the chemometrics experts from Eigenvector Inc. The tool automatically joins the absorbance and fluorescence data, including the necessary spectral corrections, and outputs readily calculated compound concentrations and sample quality classifications. The analyst only needs to select the desired sample measurement and previously elaborated prediction model to obtain the results, which makes the analysis technique very suitable for the practical daily use in a commercial winery.
The Aqualog features patented simultaneous Absorbance-Transmittance and fluorescence Excitation-Emission matrix (A-TEEM) technology which provides rapid access to a wide range of parameters important to commercial wine processing and quality characterization. The Aqualog acquires a complete UV-vis spectrum including the industry standard absorbance wavelengths at 280, 420, 520 and 620 nm, which are important to evaluate a wine鈥檚 phenolic content, color hue and intensity.
However, together the absorbance and fluorescence EEM data can be used to evaluate lot-to-lot, regional, and varietal characteristics, as well as sense the effects of oxidation and sulfite treatment as application for wine which makes fluorescence and absorbance spectroscopy a valuable tool for industrial wine characterization.
蓝鲸体育直播 Aqualog with Fast-01 Autosampler
M贸nica Rodr铆guez prepares a sample for the Aqualog
In fact, a 2021 study of fluorescence spectroscopy as a method for wine authentication showed the unique use of the A-TEEM technique for classification of red wines with respect to variety and geographical origin. Multi-block data analysis of A-TEEM data with extreme gradient boosting discriminant analysis yielded a 100 percent and 99.7 percent correct class assignment for variety and region of origin, respectively. (Ranaweera K.R.Ranaweeraa & et al, 2021).
Furthermore, the CRI has also already presented the use of A-TEEM to quantify wine polyphenols and maturity parameters in Cabernet Sauvignon in international wine congresses in the stage of R&D. The results from Vi帽a Concha y Toro鈥檚 pilot program obtained positive feedback and recognition from the company enologists, and it hopes to roll out phase two in the form of incorporating the Aqualog in-line to evaluate grapes for the commercial production process and QC/QA reasons.
鈥淲e are evaluating what the practice needs,鈥 Schober said. 鈥淭hat includes how to optimize the sampling, putting it in line and connecting all instances to make the tool available when necessary. The final assessment is expected by the end of this year.鈥
Not that it鈥檚 without controversy. Winemaking is an ancient craft, and traditional winemakers are reluctant to turn over their sensory skills to modern technology. But large wineries like Vi帽a Concha y Toro acknowledge the need to manage its harvest and production processes in the most efficient and accurate manner. So don鈥檛 be surprised to see changes down the road.
Ranaweera K.R.Ranaweeraa, A. M., Vi帽a Concha y Toro & et al. (2021, May 18). Spectrofluorometric analysis combined with machine learning for geographical and varietal authentication, and prediction of phenolic compound concentrations in red wine. Food Chemistry.
Vi帽a Concha y Toro, V. C. (2021). Center for Research and Innovation. Retrieved May 18, 2021, from Vi帽a Concha y Toro:
Bindon, B. K., Kassara, S., Nandorfy, D. E., Nicolotti, L., Do, Z., & Johnson, D. (2020). Identifying objective measures for Barossa Valley Shiraz grapes. Wine and Viticulture Journal, AWRI Report, 31鈥34.
Cleary, M., Chong, H., Ebisuda, N., Dokoozlian, N., Loscos, N., Pan, B., Santino, D., Sui, Q., & Yonker, C. (2015). Objective chemical measures of grape quality. In ACS Symposium Series (Vol. 1203, pp. 365鈥378).
Schober D., Gilmore A., Zincker J., Gonzalez A., 2021 (accepted). Determination of quality related polyphenols in Chilean wines by Absorbance-Transmission and fluorescence Excitation Emission Matrix (A-TEEM) analyses. Macrowine (virtual congress), 23-30.06.2021
Gilmore A., Schober D., Zincker J., Gonzalez A., 2020. Improving Multivariate Analysis Statistics of Chilean Wine Quality with Simultaneous Absorbance-Transmission and flourescence Excitation-Emission Matrix (A-TEEM) Analyses. Eastern Analytical Symposium (virtual congress), 16.-19.10.2020.
Gilmore A., Schober D., Penichet I., Zincker J., Gonzalez A., 2020. Quality assessment of Cabernet Sauvignon from Chile based on Simultaneous Absorbance-Transmission and flourescence Excitation-Emission Matrix (A-TEEM) Analysis. SciX (virtual congress), 12.10-23.11.2020.
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