Detection of virgin olive oil adulteration using low field unilateral NMR

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Abstract

The detection of adulteration in edible oils is a concern in the food industry, especially for the higher priced virgin olive oils. This article presents a low field unilateral nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) method for the detection of the adulteration of virgin olive oil that can be performed through sealed bottles providing a non-destructive screening technique. Adulterations of an extra virgin olive oil with different percentages of sunflower oil and red palm oil were measured with a commercial unilateral instrument, the profile NMR-Mouse. The NMR signal was processed using a 2-dimensional Inverse Laplace transformation to analyze the transverse relaxation and self-diffusion behaviors of different oils. The obtained results demonstrated the feasibility of detecting adulterations of olive oil with percentages of at least 10% of sunflower and red palm oils. © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Xu, Z., Morris, R. H., Bencsik, M., & Newton, M. I. (2014). Detection of virgin olive oil adulteration using low field unilateral NMR. Sensors (Switzerland), 14(2), 2028–2035. https://doi.org/10.3390/s140202028

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