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Camellia oil authentication: A comparative analysis and recent analytical techniques developed for its assessment. A review

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue -, Pages 88-99

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2020.01.005

Keywords

Camellia oil; Authentication; Chromatographic techniques; Spectroscopy techniques; Chemometrics

Funding

  1. National First-Class Discipline Program of Food Science and Technology [JUFSTR20180202]

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Background: Camellia oil is obtained from the camellia seed with various cultivated species (Camellia oleifera (C. oleifera), C. meiocarpa, C. vietnamensis, C. yuhsienensis, C. chekiangoleosa, C. semiserrata, C. rericulata, C. gigantocarpa, C. octopetala, C. semiserrata var. abliflora etc.), by widely used cold press extraction. As the earliest specie with high oil yield (40-60%) in China, C. oleifera, has become the most commonly available seed for camellia oil manufacturing. Because of its high nutritional and economic value, camellia oil is frequently adulterated with other cheap oils. Additionally, its quality is also susceptible to different species or regions, and various extraction technologies. These factors result in the incorrect labeling of camellia oil, and destabilize the local camellia oil market economies. Therefore, a rapid and accurate method should be prerequisite to authenticate camellia oil. Scope and approach: The officially recommended methods are tedious, and destructive to detect camellia oil adulteration. Therefore, various rapid, precise, and non-destructive techniques should be developed for camellia oil authentication. This present review provides a critical overview of these existing analytical methods in the past few years. Key findings and conclusion The mass-chromatographic, spectroscopy techniques, and other techniques including electronic noses (e-noses), isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), ion mobility spectrometry (IMS) and DNA, have been used for camellia oil authentication. Compared with the traditional chromatographic methods, infrared spectroscopy (IR), Fourier transformed (FT)-Raman, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and fluorescence spectroscopy, combined with chemometrics, respectively, are efficient alternative analytical techniques for camellia oil quality control.

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