4.7 Article

Qualitative identification of mature milk adulteration in bovine colostrum using noise-reduced dielectric spectra and linear model

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
Volume 102, Issue 15, Pages 7313-7322

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jsfa.12097

Keywords

bovine colostrum; inhomogeneity; dielectric spectroscopy; fraud identification; qualitative analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32172308]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2452021159]

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In this study, the identification of adulterated colostrum was achieved through dielectric spectroscopy analysis. Noise interference was found to be the main factor affecting the identification performance, while the scattering effect had a minor impact. Linear models showed higher accuracy rates.
BACKGROUND The rapid and accurate identification of colostrum, a strong non-homogeneous food, remains a challenge. In the present study, the dielectric spectra including the dielectric constant (epsilon ') and loss factor (epsilon '') of 154 colostrum samples adulterated with 0-50% mature milk were measured from 20 to 4500 MHz. RESULTS The results showed that the noise-reducing spectral preprocessing, including Savitzky-Golay (S-G), second derivative (SD), and S-G + SD, was significantly better than scattering-eliminating, including standard normal variate (SNV), multiplicative scatter correction (MSC), and SNV + MSC. The combination of S-G and SD was the best. Principal component analysis results demonstrated that dielectric spectroscopy is less susceptible to the inhomogeneity of colostrum and can be used to identify doped colostrum. The identification performance of linear models was better than that of non-linear models. The established linear discriminant analysis model based on full spectra had the best accuracy rates of 99.14% and 97.37% in the calibration and validation sets, respectively. Confirmatory tests on samples from different sources confirmed the satisfactory robustness of the proposed model. CONCLUSION We found that the main unfavorable effect on the identification based on dielectric spectroscopy was noise interference, rather than scattering effect caused by inhomogeneity of colostrum. The satisfactory results undoubtedly cast light on rapid detection of strongly non-homogeneous foods based on dielectric spectroscopy. (c) 2022 Society of Chemical Industry.

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