2008
DOI: 10.1021/jf073314f
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Comparison of the Effectiveness of Fatty Acids, Chlorogenic Acids, and Elements for the Chemometric Discrimination of Coffee (Coffea arabica L.) Varieties and Growing Origins

Abstract: The objective of this work was to compare the effectiveness of three chemical families, namely, chlorogenic acids, fatty acids, and elements, for the discrimination of Arabica varieties (traditional versus modern introgressed lines) and potential terroirs within a given coffee-growing area. The experimental design included three Colombian locations in full combination with five (one traditional and four introgressed) Arabica varieties and two field replications. Chlorogenic acids, fatty acids, and elements wer… Show more

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Cited by 99 publications
(127 citation statements)
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“…Green arabica and robusta coffee beans are directly taken from coffee plantations or coffee plantation cooperatives (Krivan et al 1993;Martin et al 1998aMartin et al , 1999Filho et al 2007;Oleszczuk et al 2007;Bertrand et al 2008;dos Santos et al 2009dos Santos et al , 2010. In a laboratory, coffee beans can be washed at first with tap water, followed by a neutral detergent, a diluted HCl solution and finally de-ionized water to remove soil particles and dust (dos ).…”
Section: Samples and Their Pretreatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Green arabica and robusta coffee beans are directly taken from coffee plantations or coffee plantation cooperatives (Krivan et al 1993;Martin et al 1998aMartin et al , 1999Filho et al 2007;Oleszczuk et al 2007;Bertrand et al 2008;dos Santos et al 2009dos Santos et al , 2010. In a laboratory, coffee beans can be washed at first with tap water, followed by a neutral detergent, a diluted HCl solution and finally de-ionized water to remove soil particles and dust (dos ).…”
Section: Samples and Their Pretreatmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A plant named coffee is a shrub that belongs to the Rubiaceae family, i.e., Coffea arabica (∼75 % of the world's production), Coffea canephora, named also robusta (∼25 %) and Coffea liberica (<1 %) (Martin et al 1998a;VegaCarrillo et al 2002;Zaidi et al 2006;Filho et al 2007;Grembecka et al 2007;Bertrand et al 2008). Parts of coffee plants used in the food industry for the production of coffee are fruits (berries) (Ashu and Chandravanshi 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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