Abstract
In this study, a cooling assisted solid-phase microextraction technique (CA-SPME) was proposed and used for identifying volatile and semi-volatile compounds in edible oil innovatively coupled to gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Compared with regular SPME technique, CA-SPME presented significantly higher extraction efficiencies for analytes in edible oil due to its synergistic effect of heating and cooling. After optimization of the extraction conditions including heating temperature, cooling temperature, extraction time, and added amount of edible oil, thirty-eight, thirty-six, twenty-nine, and thirty-three kinds of compounds in peanut oil, olive oil, canola oil, and soybean oil were successfully identified, respectively, using DVB/CAR/PDMS coating with extraction time of 30 min and edible oil amounts of 20 μL. Principal component analysis, partial least squares discriminant analysis, and hierarchical clustering analysis (HCA) were performed to evaluate the potential of proposed method in discriminating edible oils adulteration (peanut oil adulterated with canola oil, peanut oil adulterated with soybean oil, olive oil adulterated with canola oil) subsequently. Results demonstrated that the method was useful in successful discrimination of pure and adulterated edible oils with adulteration percentages ranging from 0.5 to 10%. Furthermore, volatiles contributing to classifications between pure and adulterated edible oils were also illustrated based on variable importance for the projection analysis and distributions of volatiles in HCA heatmaps. The proposed method provided a novel strategy for sensitive detection of edible oil adulteration without any other sample pretreatment.
Published Version
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