Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1250294 Vibrational Spectroscopy 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study compares results obtained with several chemometric methods: SIMCA, PLS2-DA, PLS2-DA with SIMCA, and PLS1-DA in two infrared spectroscopic applications. The results were optimized by selecting spectral ranges containing discriminant information. In the first application, mid-infrared spectra of crude petroleum oils were classified according to their geographical origins. In the second application, near-infrared spectra of French virgin olive oils were classified in five registered designations of origins (RDOs). The PLS-DA discrimination was better than SIMCA in classification performance for both applications. In both cases, the PLS1-DA classifications give 100% good results. The encountered difficulties with SIMCA analyses were explained by the criteria of spectral variance. As a matter of fact, when the ratio between inter-spectral variance and intra-spectral variance was close to the Fc (Fisher criterion) threshold, SIMCA analysis gave poor results. The discrimination power of the variable range selection procedure was estimated from the number of correctly classified samples.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
Authors
, , , , , , ,