Abstract

According to CODEX, moisture and volatile matter are olive oil quality parameters and the development of a rapid screening method for the determination of moisture is of interest. We recently demonstrated for the first time that the weak near-infrared (NIR) band near 5260 cm-1 is primarily attributed to a water O-H combination band. To determine the intensity of this band, we measured the peak-to-peak (p-p) height of its first derivative and generated exponential calibration curves for p-p height versus gravimetrically determined concentrations of spiked water in olive oils that had been purged of their initial moisture contents. To further optimize this univariate calibration method, calibration curves were generated in the present study based on plotting the moisture band first derivative p-p heights for neat olive oils (that were neither purged nor spiked) versus the moisture concentrations obtained by the Karl-Fischer (KF) primary reference method. To enhance the speed of FT-NIR data collection, measurements were carried in the transmission mode using disposable glass tubes. We also developed and compared a multivariate partial least squares approach to the univariate one. All the spectra were collected in two separate laboratories using two FT-NIR spectrometers of the same brand and model and no significant difference (p > 0.05) was found between the two laboratory determinations and the KF reference values at a 95% confidence interval. High accuracies were found with the two FT-NIR instruments used, as indicated by the low root mean squared error (RMSE, %) for predicted values obtained with the univariate procedure (RMSE = 0.008% and 0.010%) and the multivariate one, which yielded an even lower value (RMSE= 0.007% for both instruments). These results suggest that, once validated, the FT-NIR approach could potentially be a rapid substitute for the KF method.

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