Comparison of attenuated total reflectance mid-infrared, near infrared, and 1h-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopies for the determination of coffee’s geographical origin
Registro en:
instname:Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
reponame:Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad de Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano
Autor
Medina, Jessica
Caro Rodríguez, Diana
Arana, Victoria A.
Bernal, Andrés
Esseiva, Pierre
Wist, Julien
Institución
Resumen
The sensorial properties of Colombian coffee are renowned worldwide, which is reflected in its market value. This raises the threat
of fraud by adulteration using coffee grains from other countries, thus creating a demand for robust and cost-effective methods for
the determination of geographical origin of coffee samples. Spectroscopic techniques such as NuclearMagnetic Resonance (NMR),
near infrared (NIR), and mid-infrared (mIR) have arisen as strong candidates for the task. Although a body of work exists that
reports on their individual performances, a faithful comparison has not been established yet.We evaluated the performance of 1HNMR,
Attenuated Total ReflectancemIR (ATR-mIR), and NIR applied to fraud detection in Colombian coffee. For each technique,
we built classification models for discrimination by species (C. arabica versus C. canephora (or robusta)) and by origin (Colombia
versus other C. arabica) using a common set of coffee samples. All techniques successfully discriminated samples by species, as
expected. Regarding origin determination, ATR-mIR and 1H-NMR showed comparable capacity to discriminate Colombian coffee
samples, while NIR fell short by comparison. In conclusion, ATR-mIR, a less common technique in the field of coffee adulteration
and fraud detection, emerges as a strong candidate, faster and with lower cost compared to 1H-NMR and more discriminating
compared to NIR.