FIA−HRMS fingerprinting subjected to chemometrics as a valuable tool to address food classification and authentication: application to red wine, paprika, and vegetable oil samples

Publication date

2022-01-17T14:48:15Z

2022-01-17T14:48:15Z

2022

2022-01-17T14:48:16Z

Abstract

The rise of food fraud practices, affecting a wide variety of goods and their specific characteristics (e.g., quality or geographical origin), demands rapid high-throughput analytical approaches to ensure consumers protection. In this context, this study assesses flow injection analysis coupled to high-resolution mass spectrometry (FIA−HRMS), using a fingerprinting approach and combined with chemometrics, to address four food authentication issues: (i) the geographical origin of three Spanish red wines, (ii) the geographical origin of three European paprikas, (iii) the distinction of olive oil from other vegetable oils and (iv) the assessment of its quality category. In each case, negative and positive ionisation FIA−HRMS fingerprints, and two different data fusion strategies, were evaluated. After external validation, excellent classification accuracies were reached. Moreover, high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS) allowed sample matrices characterisation by the putative identification of the most common ions.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Quimiometria; Oli d'oliva; Vi; Chemometrics; Olive oil; Wine

Publisher

Elsevier B.V.

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.131491

Food Chemistry, 2022, vol. 373, p. 131491

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.131491

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Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Campmajó Galván et al, 2022

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/