2019
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-44521-8
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Geographical origin traceability of Cabernet Sauvignon wines based on Infrared fingerprint technology combined with chemometrics

Abstract: Mid-infrared (MIR) and near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy combined with chemometrics were explored to classify Cabernet Sauvignon wines from different countries (Australia, Chile and China). Commercial wines (n = 540) were scanned in transmission mode using MIR and NIR, and their characteristic fingerprint bands were extracted at 1750-1000 cm −1 and 4555-4353 cm −1 . Through the identification system of Tri-step infrared spectroscopy, the correlation between macrosco… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…We also determined soil carbon quality by measuring changes in soil carbon composition using Fourier‐transform infrared spectroscopy (Hu et al, 2019). This was only done for the 203 forest soil samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also determined soil carbon quality by measuring changes in soil carbon composition using Fourier‐transform infrared spectroscopy (Hu et al, 2019). This was only done for the 203 forest soil samples.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, the feasibility of differentiating subzones within a denomination of origin (DO) has been evaluated by Martelo-Vidal et al, who achieved their highest overall correct classification of 86% with LDA in comparison to soft independent modelling of class analogy (SIMCA, 56%) and support vector machine (SVM, 84%) for combined UV–Vis and NIR spectra [ 30 ]. Hu et al applied MIR and NIR to classify Cabernet Sauvignon wines with SIMCA and correctly classified Australian, Chilean, and Chinese wines with 97%, 97%, and 92% accuracy, respectively [ 31 ]. Although these works yielded an accuracy of > 90% for classification, IR spectroscopy has limitations in quantitative analysis when measuring low abundance components (<0.5 g L −1 ) [ 32 ].…”
Section: Spectroscopic Techniques Applied In Wine Authenticationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cozzolino et al (90) compared the performance with MIR (375-4,000 cm −1 ) and VIS/NIR (400-2,500 nm) for discriminate two varieties of grape juice, and LDA achieved the accuracy of 86 and 80% using MIR and VIS/NIR, respectively. Besides, FI-MIR (400-4,000 cm −1 ) outperformed the FT-NIR (12,800-4,000 cm −1 ) for classifying the geographical origins of Cabernet Sauvignon wines (92).…”
Section: Beveragementioning
confidence: 95%