Abstract
The kinetics of change in peroxide value and weight gain were simultaneously studied during the peroxidation of three vegetable oils of various chemical compositions. The initiation and propagation oxidizability parameters O(i) (kg mEq(-1) h(2)) and r(n) (h(-1)) of the canola, corn, and peanut oils were calculated to be 412 and 0.0894, 160 and 0.0641, and 36.1 and 0.0304, respectively. The weight-based parameter O(iw) ranked the oils (103,000, 51,000, and 8000% h(2), respectively) as the parameter O(i) did. However, the equivalent parameter r(nw) (0.0680, 0.1198, and 0.1875 h(-1), respectively) provided a reverse order than that of the parameter r(n). This was attributed to the fact that the value of r(n) represents the formation and decomposition of lipid hydroperoxides in general, whereas the value of r(nw) actually represents the overall tendency of an oil to the formation and polymerization of lipid hydroperoxides.