Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10544587 Food Chemistry 2005 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
Flavour analysis is typically performed by human organoleptic analysis, which is often expensive and subjective. A novel approach using a surface acoustic wave sensing electronic nose (zNoseTM) for flavour analysis was explored to characterise 16 types of vegetable oils. Fatty acid composition, iodine value, peroxide value, p-anisidine value and free fatty acid analyses were conducted to determine the quality and characteristics of vegetable oils. The zNoseTM was employed successfully for qualitative distinction of flavour in different vegetable oils. This is achieved using a visual fragrance pattern, called a VaporPrintTM, derived from the frequency of the SAW detector. VaporPrintTM was shown to be particularly useful for assessing vegetable oil aroma profile in its entirety. This image is created by transforming the time variable to a radial angle with the beginning and end of the analysis occurring at 0°, or vertical. A Chemometric method, particularly principal component analysis (PCA), was conducted for electronic nose data processing and identification. Analysis of the score plot of the PCA for the zNoseTM measurement showed that 97% of the total variance in the data was described by PC 1 and PC 2. The loading plot revealed that five compounds (m,k,n,s, and p) were important for differentiate the vegetable oils.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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