Excitation wavelength selection for quantitative analysis of carotenoids in tomatoes using Raman spectroscopy

•Raman spectroscopy was used to identify the optimal excitation wavelength for carotenoid measurement.•Tomatoes at 5 different maturity stages were used for the experiment.•The intensity of resonance Raman effect and reabsorption are different depending on the excitation wavelength.•785 nm is the su...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food chemistry 2018-08, Vol.258, p.308-313
Hauptverfasser: Hara, Risa, Ishigaki, Mika, Kitahama, Yasutaka, Ozaki, Yukihiro, Genkawa, Takuma
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Raman spectroscopy was used to identify the optimal excitation wavelength for carotenoid measurement.•Tomatoes at 5 different maturity stages were used for the experiment.•The intensity of resonance Raman effect and reabsorption are different depending on the excitation wavelength.•785 nm is the suitable excitation wavelength for qualitative analysis of carotenoids. The difference in Raman spectra for different excitation wavelengths (532 nm, 785 nm, and 1064 nm) was investigated to identify an appropriate wavelength for the quantitative analysis of carotenoids in tomatoes. For the 532 nm-excited Raman spectra, the intensity of the peak assigned to the carotenoid has no correlation with carotenoid concentration, and the peak shift reflects carotenoid composition changing from lycopene to β-carotene and lutein. Thus, 532 nm-excited Raman spectra are useful for the qualitative analysis of carotenoids. For the 785 nm- and 1064 nm-excited Raman spectra, the peak intensity of the carotenoid showed good correlation with carotenoid concentration; thus, regression models for carotenoid concentration were developed using these Raman spectra and partial least squares regression. A regression model designed using the 785 nm-excited Raman spectra showed a better result than the 532 nm- and 1064 nm-excited Raman spectra. Therefore, it can be concluded that 785 nm is the most suitable excitation wavelength for the quantitative analysis of carotenoid concentration in tomatoes.
ISSN:0308-8146
1873-7072
DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2018.03.089