Litcius/Paper detail

Chromatographic fingerprint application possibilities in food authentication

Elżbieta Górska‐Horczyczak, Magdalena Zalewska, Agnieszka Wierzbicka

2022European Food Research and Technology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The aim of the study was to compare the effectiveness of the use of low-peak chromatographic fingerprints for the differentiation of various food products. Three groups of unprocessed products (mushrooms, hazelnuts and tomatoes), food preparations (bread, dried herbs and tomato juice) and alcoholic beverages (vodka and two types of blended whiskey) were examined. A commercial electronic nose based on ultrafast gas chromatography (acquisition time 90 s) with a flame ionization detector was used for the research. Static headspace was used as a green procedure to extract volatile compounds without modifying the food matrix. Individual extraction conditions were used for each product group. Similarities and differences between profiles were analyzed by simple Principal Components Analysis. The similarity rating was determined using the Euclidean distances. Global model was built for recognition chromatographic fingerprints of food samples. The best recognition results were 100% and 89% for tomato juices, spices, separate champignon elements and hazelnuts. On the other hand, the worst recognition results were 56% and 77% for breads and strong alcoholic beverages.

Topics & Concepts

Electronic noseFood scienceFingerprint (computing)ChemistryMathematicsChromatographyArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceBiochemical Analysis and Sensing TechniquesAdvanced Chemical Sensor TechnologiesSaffron Plant Research Studies