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Science Friday
Bad perfume: Cardboard’s intense scents
Wet cardboard and food should not share the same air space
Web edition : Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
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We often joke about food that lacks any perceptible flavor as tasting like cardboard. In fact, cardboard’s blandness is one facet of its appeal to the food industry. Manufacturers pack foods in cardboard and pizzeria’s deliver their cheese-topped pies in it precisely because it won’t affect the flavor of their products. Or at least that’s been the presumption.

A pair of researchers in Germany has now catalogued 37 smelly compounds emitted by cardboard — chemicals that they argue could indeed temper the flavor and scent of foods. “Most of the identified compounds were described as odor-active [i.e. smelly] cardboard constituents for the first time,” report Michael Czerny of the Fraunhofer Institute for Process Engineering and Packaging in Freising and Andrea Buettner of University Erlangen-Nuernberg.

They found some of these compounds present in relatively high amounts, although their predominantly woody/musty notes tended to remain below the radar screen until cardboard got wet — as might occur if your pizza was delivered on a rainy night, or a food warehouse was not humidity controlled.

Indeed, “The aroma profile changed drastically when the cardboard was moistened," becoming “intense” and yucky — as in woody and musty with very pronounced fatty and moldy highlights, Czerny and Buettner report in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry.

Contributing to the overall off-putting smell were the leathery-inky scents of 3-propylphenol and 3-methyphenol. Another 29-letter-long compound smelled metallic and benzothiazole imparted the smell of rubber or car tires. Yum.

And it gets better. Czerny and Buettner describe two constituents of cardboard’s scent — 4-methylphenol and 4-ethylphenol — as having a “horse stable-like, fecal” smell. Other off-gassed chemicals smelled: “cheesy, sweaty;” soapy, fatty, mushroomlike, citrusy, spicy, woody or coconutty. A compound known as 2-methoxyphenol seemed to have a particularly complex scent — at once smoky, vanillalike and sweet.

The chemists aren’t sure why most of these chemicals don’t assault our noses while the cardboard remains dry, but speculate that some might remain walled off in cellulose until contacted by water — “which acts like a solvent.”

In a followup experiment, the pair showed cardboard’s off-scents could transfer to salad oil, presumably a substance meant to model fatty foods.


Found in: Chemistry, Food Science, Molecules and Science & Society

Comments 3
  • Is the "cardboard" that is the subject of these tests "corrugated cardboard" or "boxboard"?
    Philip Norgren Philip Norgren
    Oct. 14, 2009 at 8:39am
  • In both cases, corrugate and cardboard/boxboard/pasteboard are starched kraft fiber. The odorants ought to be coming from one of two places: the starch or the kraft fiber.

    The starches used to make cardboard are fairly highly refined although generally unsuitable for human consumption -- industrially purified amylose glue. It smells exactly like school paste used to.

    The kraft fiber is a likelier culprit. Ever smelled a woodpulp mill? The pulpwood is soaked, chipped, steamed and then kettled in hot caustic liquor for hours until solid wood falls apart like overcooked potroast. What isn't fiber turns to a soapy colloidal stew and in the process, stinks fit to stun a hog. The kraft fiber is then fished out and rinsed, rinsed, and rinsed. The rinse effluent stinks too. The kraft fiber is cast out onto screens and drained, pressed and dried to make kraft papers; the draining and drying operations stink. The resulting paper has an enormous internal surface area and etched, spongelike fibers. It's just gonna take a little stink with it, guaranteed.

    For comparison, take a cheap grade of office paper and soak it in cold water. This paper is a mix of amylose and woodpulp fiber too, but the fiber has been bleached and rinsed though several more steps before becoming paper. Inhale the aroma like a fine brandy. Hmm. Not stinky, maybe a hint of vanilla.

    Alas, if you pushed kraft paper though the extra process steps that office paper takes you'd get a much weaker product. Brown paper's "bursting strength" is its chief brag. When industry needs white corrugated boards they turn to hotformed linear polyethylene corrugate and don't even try to make corrugate from white wood fiber.

    And if the odorants in kraft paper had not been characterized in the scientific literature before now, it is surely the venial sin of the kraft manufacturers that this is so. Modern pulpmills already invest millions in stackscrubbing mechanisms, effluent treatment and halogen-free caustic/bleaching reagents largely because of environmental-impact complaints borne out by scientific evidence. They can perhaps be understood for not wanting to hand out free ammunition to the thousands of people who merely complain of the smell.

    Still and all, it ought to be possible to make an odorfree white corrugate board out of natural fiber. Rag-bond paper is plenty strong enough, especially if made from reclaimed longstaple cottons extended with industrial linters. we could have odorfree cardboard all right; but it would have to be made out of our *undershorts*. Oh the indignity!
    John Turner John Turner
    Oct. 14, 2009 at 4:16pm
  • Thanks, John;
    I was just wondering how to find out something useful about the process and then began reading your comment.
    Brian Hall Brian Hall
    Oct. 18, 2009 at 1:41am
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Citations & References:
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  • Czerny, M. and A. Buettner. 2009. Odor-Active Compounds in Cardboard. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry (in press). DOI: 10.1021/jf901435n
  • Czerny, M. 2008. Odour-Active Compounds in Paper Products. Poster presented at the 4th International Symposium on Food Packaging: Prague(November 19-21). [Go to]
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