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Chemometric studies for classification of olive oils and detection of adulteration

dc.contributor.advisor Özen, Banu en
dc.contributor.author Gürdeniz, Gözde
dc.date.accessioned 2023-11-13T09:08:10Z
dc.date.available 2023-11-13T09:08:10Z
dc.date.issued 2008 en
dc.description Thesis (Master)--Izmir Institute of Technology, Food Engineering, Izmir, 2008 en
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves: 89-94) en
dc.description Text in English; Abstract: Turkish and English en
dc.description xv, 94 leaves en
dc.description.abstract The aim of this study is to classify extra-virgin olive oils according to variety, geographical origin and harvest year and also to detect and quantify olive oil adulteration. In order to classify extra virgin olive oils, principal component analysis was applied on both fatty acid composition and middle infrared spectra. Spectral data was manipulated with a wavelet function prior to principal component analysis. Results revealed more successful classification of oils according geographical origin and variety using fatty acid composition than spectral data. However, each method has quite good ability to differentiate olive oil samples with respect to harvest year.Middle infrared spectra of all olive oil samples were related with fatty acid profile and free fatty acidity using partial least square analysis. Orthogonal signal correction and wavelet compression were applied before partial least square analysis.Correlation coefficient and relative error of prediction for oleic acid (highest amount fatty acid) were determined as 0.93 and 1.38, respectively. Also, partial least square regression resulted in 0.85 as R2 value and 0.085 as standard error of prediction value for free fatty acidity quantification.In adulteration part, spectral data manipulated with principal component and partial least square analysis, to distinguish adulterated and pure olive oil samples, and to quantify level of adulteration, respectively. The detection limit of monovarietal adulteration varied between 5 and 10% and R2 value of partial least square was determined as higher than 0.95. Hazelnut, corn-sunflower binary mixture, cottonseed and rapeseed oils can be detected in olive oil at levels higher than 10%, 5%, 5% and 5%, respectively. en
dc.identifier.uri http://standard-demo.gcris.com/handle/123456789/3724
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher Izmir Institute of Technology en
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess en_US
dc.subject.lcc TP683 .G97 2008 en
dc.subject.lcsh Olive oil--Analysis en
dc.subject.lcsh Chemometrics en
dc.subject.lcsh Adulterations en
dc.title Chemometric studies for classification of olive oils and detection of adulteration en_US
dc.type Master Thesis en_US
dspace.entity.type Publication
gdc.author.institutional Gürdeniz, Gözde
gdc.description.department Photonics en_US
gdc.description.publicationcategory Tez en_US
gdc.oaire.accepatencedate 2008-01-01
gdc.oaire.diamondjournal false
gdc.oaire.impulse 0
gdc.oaire.influence 2.9837197E-9
gdc.oaire.influencealt 0
gdc.oaire.isgreen true
gdc.oaire.keywords Adulteration
gdc.oaire.keywords Food Engineering
gdc.oaire.keywords Gıda Mühendisliği
gdc.oaire.keywords Olive oil
gdc.oaire.keywords Chemometric method
gdc.oaire.popularity 5.4090155E-10
gdc.oaire.popularityalt 0.0
gdc.oaire.publicfunded false

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