Abstract

Banana and its dried products are one of the most common foods consumed all over the world. Quality attributes of dried banana slices are typically evaluated using time-consuming and labor intensive methods which do not allow to evaluate each individual slice. Replacement of the current destructive methods for quality evaluation of dried banana slices by fast, non-destructive methods would provide large added value to the food industry. Therefore, the aim of this study was to monitor the moisture content, texture and color of banana slices during the drying process in a fast and non-destructive way. VNIR hyperspectral reflectance imaging in the 400–1000 nm range was selected for this purpose. Thanks to a cross-polarized configuration the effects of glare or specular reflection on the banana slice surfaces in the hyperspectral diffuse reflectance images was largely reduced. Reference quality attributes for all the slices (moisture content, texture and color (L*, a*, b* values) obtained using conventional destructive methods and colorimeter were predicted from their corresponding average reflectance spectra extracted from the hyperspectral images by means of partial least squares regression (PLSR). The PLSR calibration models were validated on samples which had not been used for model calibration. The results were very good for water content (R2P = 0.97, RMSEP = 0.05 kg water/kg DM), quite good for and b* value (R2P = 0.83, RMSEP = 1.95), and reasonable for texture (R2P = 0.66, RMSEP = 11.8 N), a* value (R2P = 0.53, RMSEP = 1.32) and L* value (R2P = 0.61, RMSEP = 5.92). Subsequently, these calibration models were used to predict those quality attributes at pixel level for the validation slices to visualize the spatial distribution of these quality parameters at different stages during the drying process. The obtained results clearly indicate the potential of cross-polarized hyperspectral reflectance imaging for non-destructive monitoring of the quality attributes of banana slices during drying.

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