4.6 Article

NIRS and Aquaphotomics Trace Robusta-to-Arabica Ratio in Liquid Coffee Blends

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27020388

Keywords

coffee; NIRS; aquagrams; chemometrics; authentication; PCA; PCA-LDA; PLSR

Funding

  1. European Union
  2. European Social Fund [EFOP-3.6.3-VEKOP-16-2017-00005]
  3. European Regional Development Fund
  4. Hungarian Government [GINOP-2.2.1-18-2020-00025]
  5. Ministry for Innovation and Technology [NKFIH-831-10/2019]
  6. Doctoral School of Food Science of the Hungarian University of Agriculture and Life Sciences
  7. Ministry for Innovation and Technology from National Research, Development and Innovation Fund [UNKP-21-3-I-MATE/44]

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This study aimed to compare the use of near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and the aquaphotomics approach in assessing adulteration in ground coffee and liquid coffee. The results showed that chemometrics spectra analysis could effectively distinguish between different coffee samples and accurately estimate the presence of Robusta coffee. The aquagrams results highlighted the unique characteristics of each coffee variety and their blends, indicating the potential of these methods for authenticating liquid coffee based on the water-related fingerprint and Robusta-to-Arabica ratio.
Coffee is both a vastly consumed beverage and a chemically complex matrix. For a long time, an arduous chemical analysis was necessary to resolve coffee authentication issues. Despite their demonstrated efficacy, such techniques tend to rely on reference methods or resort to elaborate extraction steps. Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) and the aquaphotomics approach, on the other hand, reportedly offer a rapid, reliable, and holistic compositional overview of varying analytes but with little focus on low concentration mixtures of Robusta-to-Arabica coffee. Our study aimed for a comparative assessment of ground coffee adulteration using NIRS and liquid coffee adulteration using the aquaphotomics approach. The aim was to demonstrate the potential of monitoring ground and liquid coffee quality as they are commercially the most available coffee forms. Chemometrics spectra analysis proved capable of distinguishing between the studied samples and efficiently estimating the added Robusta concentrations. An accuracy of 100% was obtained for the varietal discrimination of pure Arabica and Robusta, both in ground and liquid form. Robusta-to-Arabica ratio was predicted with (RCV)-C-2 values of 0.99 and 0.9 in ground and liquid form respectively. Aquagrams results accentuated the peculiarities of the two coffee varieties and their respective blends by designating different water conformations depending on the coffee variety and assigning a particular water absorption spectral pattern (WASP) depending on the blending ratio. Marked spectral features attributed to high hydrogen bonded water characterized Arabica-rich coffee, while those with the higher Robusta content showed an abundance of free water structures. Collectively, the obtained results ascertain the adequacy of NIRS and aquaphotomics as promising alternative tools for the authentication of liquid coffee that can correlate the water-related fingerprint to the Robusta-to-Arabica ratio.

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