Are there volatile chemicals in tap water that can cause a garlic odor?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the presence of a garlic odor in ice cubes and drinking water, with participants exploring potential volatile chemicals that could be responsible. The inquiry spans various contexts, including chemical composition, environmental factors, and possible contamination sources.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • One participant notes a distinct garlic smell in ice cubes and drinking water, questioning the volatile chemicals in garlic that might be similar to substances in the water.
  • Another participant suggests that allicin, a thiol found in garlic, could be similar to mercaptans, which are known to have strong odors and may be present in the water.
  • There is speculation about whether the odor could be related to materials used in the ice maker, such as plastics or metals, which might concentrate sulfur-containing compounds.
  • A participant raises the possibility that the garlic odor might originate from other foods in the refrigerator or from natural sulfur in well water, particularly if the water source is private.
  • Some participants mention the potential for insecticides with garlic bases to contaminate the water supply through runoff.
  • There is a suggestion that the ice cubes might absorb odors from their environment, similar to how truffles can impart flavor to eggs.
  • One participant introduces the idea that arsenic compounds can also have a garlic smell, though another humorously notes that if arsine were present, the original poster would likely not be able to continue posting.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express multiple competing views regarding the source of the garlic odor, with no consensus reached on a definitive explanation. Various hypotheses are presented, but uncertainty remains about the exact cause.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention various potential sources of the odor, including environmental factors, chemical properties of materials, and interactions with food, but do not resolve the underlying assumptions or dependencies on specific conditions.

Who May Find This Useful

This discussion may be of interest to individuals dealing with unusual odors in drinking water or ice, as well as those curious about the chemical properties of volatile compounds and their interactions with materials.

DaveC426913
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I am encountering a phenomenon that I am at a loss to explain. I am finding a distinct odour of garlic in ice cubes and drinking water in my home and at my work. I am wondering what the volatile chemicals in garlic are that might be similar to something in the water.

It happens in two different cities a hundred miles apart (work and home), which rules out many theories.

At home, it is occurs in ice cubes made from my ice maker. They have a very distinct garlic smell to them. This is not just me, others can smell it as well. It easily transfers. If I pick the ice up in my hands, even just tossing them into my glass, my hands will reek of garlic - enough for someone else to conclusively identify it as garlic by the smell on my hands alone.

At my work, I notice it in the filtered water (one of those charcoal filtering systems), though there it is less pronounced.



I can probably look for common causes or mundane connections myself. I'm curious about the chemical makeup of garlic, and if there might be something in the water that's similar.
 
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Dave,

I'm going to give this thread a day or two here. If nothing much comes of that, I'll move it to Chemistry, where you'll probably get better inputs on your peculiar problem.
 
Gokul43201 said:
Dave,

I'm going to give this thread a day or two here. If nothing much comes of that, I'll move it to Chemistry, where you'll probably get better inputs on your peculiar problem.
Thanks, yeah, that would have been better I suppose. Should have thought of it.
 
The stinky stuff in garlic is allicin, which is a thiol (goggle it if you want the actual structure). Common chemicals that smell similar and may well be in your water are mercaptans (RSH). These chemicals make your natural gas stink (t-butyl mercaptan), make onions stink (allyl mercaptan), skunks stink (butyl mercaptan), and make asphalt stink (I believe that's a combination of mercaptans). Don't know what the sorse could be in your area, but when we lived in Pittsburg it was a coke plant down stream.
 
DrMark said:
The stinky stuff in garlic is allicin, which is a thiol (goggle it if you want the actual structure). Common chemicals that smell similar and may well be in your water are mercaptans (RSH). These chemicals make your natural gas stink (t-butyl mercaptan), make onions stink (allyl mercaptan), skunks stink (butyl mercaptan), and make asphalt stink (I believe that's a combination of mercaptans). Don't know what the sorse could be in your area, but when we lived in Pittsburg it was a coke plant down stream.
Might it also be present in certain types of plastic or metals such as the tubing to the icemaker? It's newly installed.
 
Metals could serve to concentrate sulfur containing compounds (e.g. as MSx) and say with heat release H2S (ever smell a bad catalytic converter). I don't know of any plastics that use mercaptans as platicizers. However sulfonamides are used in some plastics. I have never worked with such compounds so I have no clue as to if they stink. Also it is possible that in the production of the plastic various sulfur impurities could produce thiol compounds (ever smell a tire fire ). A simple experiment would be to eliminate the ice maker and use tap water and see if the ice still stinks.
 
Could the garlic odor come from other foods in your refrigerator? Plastics absorb odor it seems.

Also, some well and groundwater may have natural sulfur and sulfur-eating bacteria. We have had to shock our well with chlorine bleach occasionally to get mitigate the bacteria. Are you on a private well (yours) or municipal water distribution system? If on a municipal system, they should be treating with chlorine or ozone, and perhaps fluoride if there is no natural source.

Otherwise, water is H2O with dissolved minerals and metal cations from the ground and any metal piping that is not properly passivated.
 
Moving this to Chemistry...perhaps there may be more help out there.
 
Well, some insecticides are garlic based, the smell of garlic repels the insects, perhaps some of it is getting into your water system through runoff in a nearby water source and is not being filtered out properly due to its distinctive chemical properties. Not quite sure though.
 
  • #10
Hm. Food for thought.

I'll do more experimenting, thanks.
 
  • #11
So, the ice cubes smell of garlic but fresh water does not? Sounds to me that the ice are laying in an environment together with other foods and take over the taste. Cooks use it to make truffle eggs: just put the egg necks to a piece of truffle and it will start tasting like it.
 
  • #12
Hmmmm...arsenic compunds often smell like garlic...
 
  • #13
pack_rat2 said:
Hmmmm...arsenic compunds often smell like garlic...

If your talking about arsine we wouldn't be seeing him post ;)
 

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