Abstract

The visible and near-infrared (Vis-NIR) reflectance spectroscopy was utilized for the rapid and nondestructive discrimination of edible oil adulteration. In total, 110 samples of sesame oil and rapeseed oil adulterated with soybean oil in different levels were produced to obtain the reflectance spectra of 350–2500 nm. A set of multivariant methods was applied to identify adulteration types and adulteration rates. In the qualitative analysis of adulteration type, the support vector machine (SVM) method yielded high overall accuracy with multiple spectra pretreatments. In the quantitative analysis of adulteration rate, the random forest (RF) combined with multivariate scattering correction (MSC) achieved the highest identification accuracy of adulteration rate with the full wavelengths of Vis-NIR spectra. The effective wavelengths of the Vis-NIR spectra were screened to improve the robustness of the multivariant methods. The analysis results suggested that the competitive adaptive reweighted sampling (CARS) was helpful for removing the redundant information from the spectral data and improving the prediction accuracy. The PLSR + MSC + CARS model achieved the best prediction performance in the two adulteration cases of sesame oil and rapeseed oil. The coefficient of determination () and the root mean square error () of the prediction set were 0.99656 and 0.01832 in sesame oil adulterated with soybean oil, and the and were 0.99675 and 0.01685 in rapeseed oil adulterated with soybean oil, respectively. The Vis-NIR reflectance spectroscopy with the assistance of multivariant analysis can effectively discriminate the different adulteration rates of edible oils.

Highlights

  • Edible oils are rich in essential nutrients for human beings and are some of the most common cooking ingredients in our daily lives [1]

  • This study evaluated the reliability and feasibility of visible and near-infrared (Vis-near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR)) reflectance spectroscopy for the rapid and nondestructive discrimination of edible oil adulteration

  • A Vis-NIR spectroradiometer system was constructed to obtain the reflectance spectra of the sesame oil adulterated with soybean oil and the rapeseed oil adulterated with soybean oil

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Summary

Introduction

Edible oils are rich in essential nutrients for human beings and are some of the most common cooking ingredients in our daily lives [1]. Different kinds of oils have different compositions and contents of substances that are beneficial to human health. Because the price of edible oil is highly dependent on its nutritional content, some high-value-added oils are frequently subjected to adulteration with low-quality oils in the production process to obtain undue commercial profits [3,5]. The adulteration of edible oil is prone to occur in the production process and has become a serious worldwide public health problem [9]. It is essential to develop effective and convenient methods to identify the adulteration of edible oils

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