Abstract

Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) is an analytical technique that can be very useful for stability studies in particular because of its non destructive analytical capability. However, the spectral interpretation and treatment of this kind of multivariate data remains difficult without the use of chemometrics. In this article, a recent chemometrics method, analysis of variance – principal component analysis (ANOVA-PCA), was used for NIRS stability studies of sunflower and bread wheat external reference materials (ERM). It provided a practical tool for the study of the significance of various storage conditions according to an experimental design. Thus, the effect of the temperature, the nature of the atmosphere in the packaging and the storage duration were tested. ANOVA-PCA highlighted the influence of temperature and storage duration on the stability of the sunflower materials. For the bread wheat materials, the storage conditions did not have a significant effect on stability. Consequently, by applying ANOVA-PCA to near infrared spectral data, the sunflower materials were found to be considered stable for the time length of the study, i.e. 18 months stored in a cold room, while the bread wheat materials were found to be considered stable for the time length of the study, i.e. 12 months under the same conditions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call