4.7 Article

Rapid Non-destructive Detection of Spoilage of Intact Chicken Breast Muscle Using Near-infrared and Fourier Transform Mid-infrared Spectroscopy and Multivariate Statistics

Journal

FOOD AND BIOPROCESS TECHNOLOGY
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 338-347

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11947-009-0298-4

Keywords

NIR; FT-IR; OPA; PCA; PLS2-DA; Chicken breast muscle; Spoilage

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Near-infrared (NIR) transflectance and Fourier transform-infrared (FT-IR) attenuated total reflectance spectra of intact chicken breast muscle packed under aerobic conditions and stored at 4A degrees for 14 days were collected and investigated for their potential use in rapid non-destructive detection of spoilage. Multiplicative scatter correction-transformed NIR and standard normal variate-transformed FT-IR spectra were analysed using principal component analysis (PCA), partial least-squares discriminant analysis (PLS2-DA) and outer product analysis (OPA). PCA and PLS2-DA regression failed to completely discriminate between days 0 and 4 samples (total viable count (TVC) days 0 and 4 = 5.23 and 6.75 log(10) cfu g(-1)) which had bacterial loads smaller than the accepted levels (8 log(10) cfu g(-1)) of sensory spoilage detection but classified correctly days 8 and 14 samples (TVC days 8 and 14 = 9.61 and 10.37 log(10) cfu g(-1)). OPA performed on both NIR and FT-IR datasets revealed several correlations that highlight the effect of proteolysis in influencing the spectra. These correlations indicate that increase in free amino acids and peptides could be the main factor in the discrimination of intact chicken breast muscle. This investigation suggests that NIR and FT-IR spectroscopy can become useful, rapid, non-destructive tools for spoilage detection.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available