Abstract
Miniature mass spectrometers exhibit immense application potential in on-site detection due to their small size and low cost. However, their detection accuracy is severely affected by factors such as sample pre-processing and environmental conditions. In this study, we propose a data processing method based on long short-term memory-ensemble empirical mode decomposition (LSTM-EEMD) to improve the quality of on-site detection data from miniature mass spectrometers. The EEMD method can clearly decompose the different physical feature components in the small-scale spectrometer signals, while the LSTM method can adaptively learn the internal feature relationships of the signals. Thus, by combining the two, the parameters for the EEMD signal reconstruction can be optimized in an adaptive manner, obtaining the optimized coefficients. Compared to the previous EEMD feature enhancement approach, the LSTM-EEMD method not only significantly improves the coefficient of determination (R2) and relative standard deviation (RSD) of the data, enhancing the linear range, but also achieves fully adaptive processing throughout the workflow, greatly boosting the efficiency. By leveraging a miniature mass spectrometer, data for N-acetyl-l-aspartic acid (NAA), 2-Hydroxyglutarate (2-HG), and γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA) in actual blood samples have been obtained. The experimental results demonstrate that the LSTM-EEMD method can markedly enhance the accuracy and usability of the biological sample data in practical testing, providing new perspectives and possibilities for research and applications in the relevant domain.
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