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ATR–FTIR SPECTROSCOPY COMBINED WITH CHEMOMETRICS FOR RAPID CLASSIFICATION OF EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OILS AND EDIBLE OILS FROM DIFFERENT CULTIVARS AVAILABLE ON THE TURKISH MARKETS

Year 2018, Volume: 19 Issue: 4, 926 - 947, 31.12.2018
https://doi.org/10.18038/aubtda.425374

Abstract

A combination of attenuated total reflectance–Fourier transform infrared (ATR–FTIR) spectroscopy and chemometric techniques was used to classify different trademarks of edible oils available on the Turkish markets. A total of 144 spectra of edible oil samples, including extra virgin olive oil (VOO), hazelnut oil (HNO), cottonseed oil (CSO), sunflower oil (SFO) and soybean oil (SBO), was recorded. The feasibility of ATR–FTIR with multivariate data analysis for discrimination of extra VOOs from other edible oils was also evaluated. Classification of edible oils was performed using principal components analysis (PCA), hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA), linear discriminant analysis (LDA) and soft independent modeling of class analogies (SIMCA). The spectra collected from wavelength region of 4000–650 cm-1 and 28 different wavelength ranges selected from full spectra were evaluated for optimal classification models. All multivariate analysis provided excellent discriminations between the edible oil classes with low classification error. LDA models constructed with five predictors, and a total of 100% of edible oil samples from different trademarks were correctly classified. Furthermore, no misclassification was reported for the discriminant analysis in supervised SIMCA models with an accuracy of 95%. Consequently, ATR–FTIR spectroscopy combined with multivariate data analyses provides excellent illustrations of the relative positions of the different brands of commercial edible oils according to their quality and purity.

References

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  • [6] Lerma-Garcia M, Ramis-Ramos G, Herrero-Martinez J, et al. Authentication of extra virgin olive oils by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Food Chem 2010;118:78–83.
  • [7] Ozulku G, Yildirim RM, Toker OS, et al. Rapid detection of adulteration of cold pressed sesame oil adultered with hazelnut , canola , and sun fl ower oils using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy combined with chemometric. Food Control 2017;82:212–216.
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  • [9] De P, Dominguez-vidal A, Bosque-sendra JM, et al. Olive oil assessment in edible oil blends by means of ATR-FTIR and chemometrics. Food Control 2012;23:449–455.
  • [10] Zhao X, Dong D, Zheng W. Discrimination of Adulterated Sesame Oil Using Mid-infrared Spectroscopy and Chemometrics. Food Anal Methods 2015;8:2308–2314.
  • [11] Downey G, Mcintyre P, Davies AN. Detecting and Quantifying Sunflower Oil Adulteration in Extra Virgin Olive Oils from the Eastern Mediterranean by Visible and Near-Infrared Spectroscopy. J Agric Food Chem 2002;50:5520–5525.
  • [12] Kasemsumran S, Kang N, Christy A, et al. Partial Least Squares Processing of Near ‐ Infrared Spectra for Discrimination and Quantification of Adulterated Olive Oils. Spectrosc Lett 2007;38:839–851.
  • [13] Tan J, Li R, Jiang Z, et al. Synchronous front-face fluorescence spectroscopy for authentication of the adulteration of edible vegetable oil with refined used frying oil. Food Chem 2017;217:274–280.
  • [14] Durán I, Domínguez J, Airado D, et al. Detection and quanti fi cation of extra virgin olive oil adulteration by means of auto fl uorescence excitation-emission pro fi les combined with multi-way classi fi cation. Talanta 2018;178:751–762.
  • [15] Lopez-Diez EC, Bianchi G, Goodacre R. Rapid Quantitative Assessment of the Adulteration of Virgin Olive Oils with Hazelnut Oils Using Raman Spectroscopy and. J Agric Food Chem 2003;51:6145–6150.
  • [16] Yang H, Irudayaraj J, Paradkar MM. Discriminant analysis of edible oils and fats by. Food Chem 2005;93:25–32.
  • [17] Mendes TO, Rocha RA, Anjos VDC, et al. Quantification of Extra-virgin Olive Oil Adulteration with Soybean Oil : a Comparative Study of NIR , MIR , and Raman Spectroscopy Associated with Chemometric Approaches. Food Anal Methods 2015;8:2339–2346.
  • [18] Vlachos N, Skopelitis Y, Psaroudaki M, et al. Applications of Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy to edible oils. Anal Chim Acta 2006;574:459–465.
  • [19] Georgouli K, Martinez J, Rincon D, et al. Continuous statistical modelling for rapid detection of adulteration of extra virgin olive oil using mid infrared and Raman spectroscopic data. Food Chem 2017;217:735–742.
  • [20] Pizarro C, Rodriguez-Tecedor S, Perez-del-Notario N, et al. Classification of Spanish extra virgin olive oils by data fusion of visible spectroscopic fingerprints and chemical descriptors. Food Chem 2013;138:915–922.
  • [21] Gouvinhas I, Almeida JMMM De, Carvalho T, et al. Discrimination and characterisation of extra virgin olive oils from three cultivars in different maturation stages using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy in tandem with chemometrics. Food Chem 2015;174:226–232.
  • [22] Yildiz G, Huseyin T. Quantification of soybean oil adulteration in extra virgin olive oil using portable raman spectroscopy. Food Meas Charecterization 2017;11:523–529.
  • [23] Saucedo-hern Y, Jes M, Herrero-martínez M, et al. Classification of Pumpkin Seed Oils According to Their Species and Genetic Variety by Attenuated Total Reflection Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectroscopy. J Agric Food Chem 2011;59:4125–4129.
  • [24] Savitzky A, Golay MJE. Smoothing and Differentiation of Data by Simplified Least Squares Procedures. Anal Chem 1964;36:1627–1639.
  • [25] De-Hua D, Xu L, Ye Z-H, et al. FTIR Spectroscopy and Chemometric Class Modeling Techniques for Authentication of Chinese Sesame Oil. J Am Oil Chem Soc 2012;89:1003–1009.
  • [26] Arslan FN, Sapci AN, Duru F, et al. A study on monitoring of frying performance and oxidative stability of cottonseed and palm oil blends in comparison with original oils. Int J Food Prop 2017;20:704–717.
  • [27] Borràs E, Ferré J, Boqué R, et al. Data fusion methodologies for food and beverage authentication and quality assessment e A review s a , Joan Ferr e Eva Borr a. Anal Chim Acta 2015;891:1–14.
  • [28] Rohman A, Man YBC, Yusof FM. The Use of FTIR Spectroscopy and Chemometrics for Rapid Authentication of Extra Virgin Olive Oil. J Am Oil Chem Soc 2014;91:207–213.
Year 2018, Volume: 19 Issue: 4, 926 - 947, 31.12.2018
https://doi.org/10.18038/aubtda.425374

Abstract

References

  • [1] Gurdeniz G, Ozen B, Tokatli F. Classification of Turkish olive oils with respect to cultivar , geographic origin and harvest year , using fatty acid profile and mid-IR spectroscopy. Eur Food Res Technol 2008;227:1275–1281.
  • [2] Lohumi S, Lee S, Lee H, et al. A review of vibrational spectroscopic techniques for the detection of food authenticity and adulteration. Trends Food Sci Technol 2015;46:85–98.
  • [3] Rohman A, Man YBC. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy for analysis of extra virgin olive oil adulterated with palm oil. Food Res Int 2010;43:886–892.
  • [4] Bevilacqua M, Bucci R, Magrì AD, et al. Tracing the origin of extra virgin olive oils by infrared spectroscopy and chemometrics: A case study. Anal Chim Acta 2012;717:39–51.
  • [5] Kasemsumran S, Kang N, Christy A, et al. Partial Least Squares Processing of Near ‐ Infrared Spectra for Discrimination and Quantification of Adulterated Olive Oils. Spectrosc Lett 2007;38:839–851.
  • [6] Lerma-Garcia M, Ramis-Ramos G, Herrero-Martinez J, et al. Authentication of extra virgin olive oils by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Food Chem 2010;118:78–83.
  • [7] Ozulku G, Yildirim RM, Toker OS, et al. Rapid detection of adulteration of cold pressed sesame oil adultered with hazelnut , canola , and sun fl ower oils using ATR-FTIR spectroscopy combined with chemometric. Food Control 2017;82:212–216.
  • [8] Zhang Q, Liu C, Sun Z, et al. Authentication of edible vegetable oils adulterated with used frying oil by Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy. Food Chem 2012;132:1607–1613.
  • [9] De P, Dominguez-vidal A, Bosque-sendra JM, et al. Olive oil assessment in edible oil blends by means of ATR-FTIR and chemometrics. Food Control 2012;23:449–455.
  • [10] Zhao X, Dong D, Zheng W. Discrimination of Adulterated Sesame Oil Using Mid-infrared Spectroscopy and Chemometrics. Food Anal Methods 2015;8:2308–2314.
  • [11] Downey G, Mcintyre P, Davies AN. Detecting and Quantifying Sunflower Oil Adulteration in Extra Virgin Olive Oils from the Eastern Mediterranean by Visible and Near-Infrared Spectroscopy. J Agric Food Chem 2002;50:5520–5525.
  • [12] Kasemsumran S, Kang N, Christy A, et al. Partial Least Squares Processing of Near ‐ Infrared Spectra for Discrimination and Quantification of Adulterated Olive Oils. Spectrosc Lett 2007;38:839–851.
  • [13] Tan J, Li R, Jiang Z, et al. Synchronous front-face fluorescence spectroscopy for authentication of the adulteration of edible vegetable oil with refined used frying oil. Food Chem 2017;217:274–280.
  • [14] Durán I, Domínguez J, Airado D, et al. Detection and quanti fi cation of extra virgin olive oil adulteration by means of auto fl uorescence excitation-emission pro fi les combined with multi-way classi fi cation. Talanta 2018;178:751–762.
  • [15] Lopez-Diez EC, Bianchi G, Goodacre R. Rapid Quantitative Assessment of the Adulteration of Virgin Olive Oils with Hazelnut Oils Using Raman Spectroscopy and. J Agric Food Chem 2003;51:6145–6150.
  • [16] Yang H, Irudayaraj J, Paradkar MM. Discriminant analysis of edible oils and fats by. Food Chem 2005;93:25–32.
  • [17] Mendes TO, Rocha RA, Anjos VDC, et al. Quantification of Extra-virgin Olive Oil Adulteration with Soybean Oil : a Comparative Study of NIR , MIR , and Raman Spectroscopy Associated with Chemometric Approaches. Food Anal Methods 2015;8:2339–2346.
  • [18] Vlachos N, Skopelitis Y, Psaroudaki M, et al. Applications of Fourier transform-infrared spectroscopy to edible oils. Anal Chim Acta 2006;574:459–465.
  • [19] Georgouli K, Martinez J, Rincon D, et al. Continuous statistical modelling for rapid detection of adulteration of extra virgin olive oil using mid infrared and Raman spectroscopic data. Food Chem 2017;217:735–742.
  • [20] Pizarro C, Rodriguez-Tecedor S, Perez-del-Notario N, et al. Classification of Spanish extra virgin olive oils by data fusion of visible spectroscopic fingerprints and chemical descriptors. Food Chem 2013;138:915–922.
  • [21] Gouvinhas I, Almeida JMMM De, Carvalho T, et al. Discrimination and characterisation of extra virgin olive oils from three cultivars in different maturation stages using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy in tandem with chemometrics. Food Chem 2015;174:226–232.
  • [22] Yildiz G, Huseyin T. Quantification of soybean oil adulteration in extra virgin olive oil using portable raman spectroscopy. Food Meas Charecterization 2017;11:523–529.
  • [23] Saucedo-hern Y, Jes M, Herrero-martínez M, et al. Classification of Pumpkin Seed Oils According to Their Species and Genetic Variety by Attenuated Total Reflection Fourier-Transform Infrared Spectroscopy. J Agric Food Chem 2011;59:4125–4129.
  • [24] Savitzky A, Golay MJE. Smoothing and Differentiation of Data by Simplified Least Squares Procedures. Anal Chem 1964;36:1627–1639.
  • [25] De-Hua D, Xu L, Ye Z-H, et al. FTIR Spectroscopy and Chemometric Class Modeling Techniques for Authentication of Chinese Sesame Oil. J Am Oil Chem Soc 2012;89:1003–1009.
  • [26] Arslan FN, Sapci AN, Duru F, et al. A study on monitoring of frying performance and oxidative stability of cottonseed and palm oil blends in comparison with original oils. Int J Food Prop 2017;20:704–717.
  • [27] Borràs E, Ferré J, Boqué R, et al. Data fusion methodologies for food and beverage authentication and quality assessment e A review s a , Joan Ferr e Eva Borr a. Anal Chim Acta 2015;891:1–14.
  • [28] Rohman A, Man YBC, Yusof FM. The Use of FTIR Spectroscopy and Chemometrics for Rapid Authentication of Extra Virgin Olive Oil. J Am Oil Chem Soc 2014;91:207–213.
There are 28 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Engineering
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Fatma Nur Arslan This is me

Publication Date December 31, 2018
Published in Issue Year 2018 Volume: 19 Issue: 4

Cite

AMA Arslan FN. ATR–FTIR SPECTROSCOPY COMBINED WITH CHEMOMETRICS FOR RAPID CLASSIFICATION OF EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OILS AND EDIBLE OILS FROM DIFFERENT CULTIVARS AVAILABLE ON THE TURKISH MARKETS. Eskişehir Technical University Journal of Science and Technology A - Applied Sciences and Engineering. December 2018;19(4):926-947. doi:10.18038/aubtda.425374