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Whiskey “Webs” Could Help In Determining Counterfeit Booze

Counterfeit whiskey is not an uncommon thing on the open market, particularly in secondary buying situations. A smart counterfeiter knows the steps necessary to make a bottle look like it holds prized juice on its inside, with those that buying it unknowingly ending up with a worthless product. Science can help in countering this however, and one recent scientific study looking at the concept of “whiskey webs” could someday hold promise.

It is already known that when a drop of liquid evaporates, solids are left behind in a pattern that depends on what the liquid is, what solids are in it and the environmental conditions. A team of scientists led by one Stuart Williams “previously found that drops of diluted American whiskeys –– but not their Scotch or Canadian counterparts –– formed webbed patterns when dried on a glass surface, and there were hints that the pattern was distinctive for different brands of whiskey. In the current study, the researchers wanted to see how the whiskey webs form in more detail, and whether they could serve as fingerprints of the spirits.

“The team used time-lapse microscopy to examine droplets of diluted American whiskey as the liquid evaporated. Non-volatile organic compounds, such as phenols, aromatics and esters, clustered together and were driven to the surface of the droplet, where they formed monolayers. As the surface area of the droplet decreased, the monolayers collapsed, creating strands of the web.

whiskey webs
A drop of American whiskey evaporated to form a distinctive web-like pattern of solutes.
(image via: Adapted from ACS Nano 2020, DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.9b08984)

“The researchers showed that different American whiskeys showed unique web patterns that could be correctly matched to unknown samples more than 90% of the time. The distinctive webs arise from the unique combination of solutes in each whiskey, the researchers say.”

The results, reported in ACS Nano, suggest that these distinctive “whiskey webs” could someday be used to identify counterfeit spirits. The authors do not acknowledge any funding sources for this paper.

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