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  • Identification of vegetable oil botanical speciation in refined vegetable oil blends using an innovative combination of chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques.

Identification of vegetable oil botanical speciation in refined vegetable oil blends using an innovative combination of chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques.

Food chemistry (2015-07-21)
Maria Teresa Osorio, Simon A Haughey, Christopher T Elliott, Anastasios Koidis
ABSTRACT

European Regulation 1169/2011 requires producers of foods that contain refined vegetable oils to label the oil types. A novel rapid and staged methodology has been developed for the first time to identify common oil species in oil blends. The qualitative method consists of a combination of a Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to profile the oils and fatty acid chromatographic analysis to confirm the composition of the oils when required. Calibration models and specific classification criteria were developed and all data were fused into a simple decision-making system. The single lab validation of the method demonstrated the very good performance (96% correct classification, 100% specificity, 4% false positive rate). Only a small fraction of the samples needed to be confirmed with the majority of oils identified rapidly using only the spectroscopic procedure. The results demonstrate the huge potential of the methodology for a wide range of oil authenticity work.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Hexane, JIS 1000, ≥96.0%, for residue analysis
Sigma-Aldrich
Hexane, anhydrous, 95%
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Hexane, SAJ first grade, ≥95.0%
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Hexane, JIS 300, ≥96.0%, for residue analysis
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Hexane, ≥96.0%, suitable for residual phthalate analysis
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Hexane, JIS special grade, ≥96.0%
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Hexane, for residue analysis, JIS 5000
Sigma-Aldrich
Hexane, suitable for HPLC
Sigma-Aldrich
Hexane, HPLC Plus, for HPLC, GC, and residue analysis, ≥95%
Sigma-Aldrich
Methyl tridecanoate, ≥97% (GC)