Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils

Lard adulteration in processed food has been a major public concern as it tightly connected to religion and believes, other than concern on the danger of heart coronary diseases. A number of works have been applied on discriminating lard from other animal fats and plant oils. Most of them are based...

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Main Author: Amat Sairin, Masyitah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/1/IPPH%202018%203%20-%20IR.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.771552020-03-05T01:22:06Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/ Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils Amat Sairin, Masyitah Lard adulteration in processed food has been a major public concern as it tightly connected to religion and believes, other than concern on the danger of heart coronary diseases. A number of works have been applied on discriminating lard from other animal fats and plant oils. Most of them are based on non-electrical properties sensing and require meticulous lab steps and huge lab-based equipment. Hence, the requirement to develop rapid, low cost, non-destructive and portable Halal authentication and verification system. This study aims to provide basic information that would serve as the foundation for studies on the development of adulteration monitoring systems and Halal sensors by means of spectral permittivity data. In this research, we propose and experimentally demonstrate the use of spectral permittivity with correlation to fatty acid methyl ester composition as a technique to discriminate lard from other edible oils. The spectral permittivity profile for edible oil was investigated in a wide radio frequency range between 5 MHz to 30 MHz at different temperature of 45°C, 65°C and 85°C. Fatty acid composition of edible oil was investigated by fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS). From the spectral permittivity data and fatty acid methyl ester composition obtained, multiple data analysis techniques were implemented. Relative standard deviation (RSD) is used as a mean to characterize measurement variability and validate the precision of the technique. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was implemented for statistical analysis to investigate the significant difference between different edible oils samples. Tukey’s range test was used to group the edible oils into different classes. Principal component analysis (PCA) was implemented to the data for statistical modeling to cluster different groups of edible oils, especially lard from other edible oils. The spectral permittivity profile of edible oil shows slight decrease as the frequency is increased, which could be explained by the movement limitation of the dipoles at high frequency electric field. Increase in temperature shows that the spectral permittivity profile of edible oils were decreasing, which is caused by increased kinetic energy and mechanical amplitudes of motion of the molecules. Other than that, when the temperature increased, the viscosity of the material is reduced, causing reduction of relaxation time and higher dipole moment which also result in decreasing spectral permittivity. The study on fatty acid composition shows edible oils that have higher long chain fatty acid composition have lower spectral permittivity; and spectral permittivity of edible oils increases with increasing degree of fatty acid unsaturation. The technique was proved to have high precision and small variability. One-way ANOVA shows that there is significant difference between different edible oils. Tukey’s range test and PCA shows good performance in separating different edible oils; especially in discriminating lard from other edible oils. 2017-12 Thesis NonPeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/1/IPPH%202018%203%20-%20IR.pdf Amat Sairin, Masyitah (2017) Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils. Masters thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Oils and fats - Analysis Lard
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
topic Oils and fats - Analysis
Lard
spellingShingle Oils and fats - Analysis
Lard
Amat Sairin, Masyitah
Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
description Lard adulteration in processed food has been a major public concern as it tightly connected to religion and believes, other than concern on the danger of heart coronary diseases. A number of works have been applied on discriminating lard from other animal fats and plant oils. Most of them are based on non-electrical properties sensing and require meticulous lab steps and huge lab-based equipment. Hence, the requirement to develop rapid, low cost, non-destructive and portable Halal authentication and verification system. This study aims to provide basic information that would serve as the foundation for studies on the development of adulteration monitoring systems and Halal sensors by means of spectral permittivity data. In this research, we propose and experimentally demonstrate the use of spectral permittivity with correlation to fatty acid methyl ester composition as a technique to discriminate lard from other edible oils. The spectral permittivity profile for edible oil was investigated in a wide radio frequency range between 5 MHz to 30 MHz at different temperature of 45°C, 65°C and 85°C. Fatty acid composition of edible oil was investigated by fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analysis using gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS). From the spectral permittivity data and fatty acid methyl ester composition obtained, multiple data analysis techniques were implemented. Relative standard deviation (RSD) is used as a mean to characterize measurement variability and validate the precision of the technique. One-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) was implemented for statistical analysis to investigate the significant difference between different edible oils samples. Tukey’s range test was used to group the edible oils into different classes. Principal component analysis (PCA) was implemented to the data for statistical modeling to cluster different groups of edible oils, especially lard from other edible oils. The spectral permittivity profile of edible oil shows slight decrease as the frequency is increased, which could be explained by the movement limitation of the dipoles at high frequency electric field. Increase in temperature shows that the spectral permittivity profile of edible oils were decreasing, which is caused by increased kinetic energy and mechanical amplitudes of motion of the molecules. Other than that, when the temperature increased, the viscosity of the material is reduced, causing reduction of relaxation time and higher dipole moment which also result in decreasing spectral permittivity. The study on fatty acid composition shows edible oils that have higher long chain fatty acid composition have lower spectral permittivity; and spectral permittivity of edible oils increases with increasing degree of fatty acid unsaturation. The technique was proved to have high precision and small variability. One-way ANOVA shows that there is significant difference between different edible oils. Tukey’s range test and PCA shows good performance in separating different edible oils; especially in discriminating lard from other edible oils.
format Thesis
author Amat Sairin, Masyitah
author_facet Amat Sairin, Masyitah
author_sort Amat Sairin, Masyitah
title Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
title_short Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
title_full Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
title_fullStr Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
title_full_unstemmed Correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
title_sort correlation between spectral permittivity characteristics and fatty acid methyl ester composition for lard detection in edible oils
publishDate 2017
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/1/IPPH%202018%203%20-%20IR.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/77155/
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score 13.211869