Litcius/Paper detail

Assessment of the Analytical Performance of Three Near-Infrared Spectroscopy Instruments (Benchtop, Handheld and Portable) through the Investigation of Coriander Seed Authenticity

Claire McVey, Una Gordon, Simon A. Haughey, Christopher T. Elliott

2021Foods41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The performance of three near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) instruments was compared through the investigation of coriander seed authenticity. The Thermo Fisher iS50 NIRS benchtop instrument, the portable Ocean Insights Flame-NIR and the Consumer Physics handheld SCiO device were assessed in conjunction with chemometric modelling in order to determine their predictive capabilities and use as quantitative tools through regression analysis. Two hundred authentic coriander seed samples and ninety adulterated samples were analysed on each device. Prediction models were developed and validated using SIMCA 15 chemometric software. All instruments correctly predicted 100% of the adulterated samples. The best models resulted in correct predictions of 100%, 98.5% and 95.6% for authentic coriander samples using spectra from the iS50, Flame-NIR and SCiO, respectively. The development of regression models highlighted the limitations of the Flame-NIR and SCiO for quantitative analysis, compared to the iS50. However, the results indicate their use as screening tools for on-site analysis of food, at various stages of the food supply chain.

Topics & Concepts

ChemometricsNear-infrared spectroscopyMobile devicePartial least squares regressionChromatographyMathematicsChemistryComputer scienceProcess engineeringAnalytical Chemistry (journal)StatisticsEngineeringBiologyOperating systemNeuroscienceSpectroscopy and Chemometric AnalysesSpectroscopy Techniques in Biomedical and Chemical ResearchAdvanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
Assessment of the Analytical Performance of Three Near-Infrared Spectroscopy Instruments (Benchtop, Handheld and Portable) through the Investigation of Coriander Seed Authenticity | Litcius