Grasas y Aceites (Mar 2013)

Control of quality and silo storage of sunflower seeds using near infrared technology

  • I. González-Martín,
  • V. Villaescusa-García,
  • F. López-González,
  • C. Oiz-Jiménez,
  • I. A. Lobos-Ortega,
  • B. Gordillo,
  • J. M. Hernández-Hierro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3989/gya.096312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64, no. 1
pp. 30 – 35

Abstract

Read online

This work assesses the application of near infrared spectroscopy technology for the quality control of sunflower seeds direct from farmers and from a storage silo. The results show that the analytical method employing near infrared spectroscopy can be used as a rapid and non-destructive tool for the determination of moisture, fat and high/low oleic acid contents in samples of sunflower seeds. The ranges obtained were comparable to those reported for classic chemical methods, and were between 4.6-21.4% for moisture; 38.4-49.6% for fat, and 60.0-93.1% for oleic acid expressed as percentage of total fatty acids. A stepwise discriminant analysis was performed to determine the most useful wavelengths for classifying sunflower seeds in terms of their (high/low) oleic acid composition. The discriminant model allows the classification of sunflower seeds with high or low oleic acid contents, with a prediction rate of 90.5% for internal validation and of 89.4% for cross-validation.

Keywords