4.6 Article

Comparison of Spectroscopic Techniques for Determining the Peroxide Value of 19 Classes of Naturally Aged, Plant-Based Edible Oils

期刊

APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY
卷 75, 期 7, 页码 781-794

出版社

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0003702821994500

关键词

Partial least squares; PLS; edible oils; peroxide value; mid-infrared spectroscopy; MIR; near-infrared spectroscopy; NIR; Raman; elliptical joint confidence region

资金

  1. NSF [CHM 1506853, CHM 1560325, CHM 1506915]
  2. agency of the United States government

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This study evaluated the performance of various spectroscopic techniques in predicting peroxide values of different oil samples, with near-infrared spectroscopy showing the highest accuracy.
The peroxide value of edible oils is a measure of the degree of oxidation, which directly relates to the freshness of the oil sample. Several studies previously reported in the literature have paired various spectroscopic techniques with multivariate analyses to rapidly determine peroxide values using field portable and process instrumentation; those efforts presented ``best-case scenarios'' with oils from narrowly defined training and test sets. The purpose of this paper is to evaluate the use of near- and mid-infrared absorption and Raman scattering spectroscopies on oil samples from different oil classes, including seasonal and vendor variations, to determine which measurement technique or combination thereof is best for predicting peroxide values. Following peroxide value assays of each oil class using an established titration-based method, global and global-subset calibration models were constructed from spectroscopic data collected on the 19 oil classes used in this study. Spectra from each optical technique were used to create partial least squares regression calibration models to predict the peroxide value of unknown oil samples. A global peroxide value model based on near-infrared (8mm optical path length) oil measurements produced the lowest RMSEP (4.9), followed by 24mm optical path length near infrared (5.1), Raman (6.9) and 50 mm optical path length mid-infrared (7.3). However, it was determined that the Raman RMSEP resulted from chance correlations. Global peroxide value models based on low-level fusion of the NIR (8 and 24mm optical path length) data and all infrared data produced the same RMSEP of 5.1. Global subset models, based on any of the spectroscopies and olive oil training sets from any class (pure, extra light, extra virgin), all failed to extrapolate to the nonolive oils. However, the near-infrared global subset model built on extra virgin olive oil could extrapolate to test samples from other olive oil classes. This work demonstrates the difficulty of developing a truly global method for determining peroxide value of oils.

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